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VOLUME LXVI. 


LOUISVILLE, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1884. 


NEW SERIES, NO. 5,540. 


CINCINNATI 

j, the great Industrial center of the 'Veil. em¬ 
ploying a capital of over $7->.CH)0.000 in manufac¬ 
turing alone. In 5,336 fnclfirl©* then* are en- 
gaged 86,203 hands, producing an annual aggre 
* al * of over $=.* 00 , 000,000 m uuumfociurad 

goods. , 

The following are amonp the moat reliable anil 
extensive Manufacturing and Mercantile estab¬ 
lishments iu Cin cinnati: _ 

lEaTAnusiintn 1849.) 

ARCHITECTURAL 

And ARTISTIC IRON WORKS. 

J. P. WALTON £ CO.. 

Culvert and Harrison Sts., 

CranKHATt. 


[ErranuaBtn 18. ..J 

ARCHITECTURAL 

IKON ROOFING mil biding nnd conig.l- 
ed lrou of all kink*, the Largest Man¬ 
ufacturer* in the Lulled .state*. 
PORTER IRON KOuHMi CO., 101, 

Wat From St., _ ckhmuti. 

[EaTABusHxn 1848.) 

ARCHITECTURAL 

GALVANIZED Iron Cornices,W indowCap*, 
bky Light*, and Tin and SlateUooflug. 
WITT * BROWN. 

144 West Third St-. 

Ci.sc l?fSAT1. 

fEaranuanan 1843.] 

ariba roasted coffee. 

Uaa no equal. 

L. J. WILSON A CO.. 

Importer* of Coffees. Indigo and 
Spices, 48 W. Second St., 
CiaciyitATL 


lErranusago 1838-1 

booksellers, 

bl'ATIuNERS and IMPORTF.TtS, 

ROBERT CLARXE A CO.. 

til 93 and bo "m>i 1 ourth St., 

* Cincinnati. 

CnUloguM of nil dopnruneoia (nomo twoniy w 

luntbcrTmAileil on application. 


(EiiTAUUaiwn 1846.) 

5RASS GOODS, Elc. 

Machinist*. Straw and Gaa Fitter*, Boll©r- 

m. cor. Pearl and Ludlow bH., CM 


nxuiKNAri. 


lEaTABUsaao 1827. J 
AHRIAGES, 

Buggies. Landaus. LAndaulet*. Brougham*, 
sekaway*.Vicluriaa aud Pluuflon* In graat van- 
. The GEO. 0. MILLER SONS* L’oi tinge Co., 
iii in aud 23 >\ eat bevanth St.. 

Cincinnati. 


lESTADUSHSD 1817.) 

NCINNATl 

type foundry, 

201 vine SUvet. 

iiut** ant> Swim*** on Application 


|EaTAm.ts»ar» 1863.) 

NCINNATl STAMPING CO. 
Manufacturer* of Plain. Stamped and Ja- 
lmurn'll Tin. Zinc and Sheet Iron Vi are. 
Jobbers and Importer* of Metal*, 
tbcut Cor. »W ««» 


[Kstabusbko 1867.) 

OTTON SEED OIL MILLS, 

The Planters' Oil Machinery Co.. 

134 West Second Street. 

Cincinnati. 


lEirrAiiUSMKo 1837.1 

IY GOODS and NOTIONS, 

\\ UgLESALE. 

geo. w. McALFIN A CO., 

101, 103 aud lou W. Fourth St 

Onciksati. 


IE#ta»»li*h«d 1849.) 

NCY GOODS, TOYS. Etc 
KhOfciT BROS. A CO.. Importer* nnd Job- 
of laucy and Sporting Uouda, Tvf***** 
Croquet aud Lawn Tetml* bupphe* tubule 
itefor Neely * Patent •Adjustable Muncle 
ir Skate. Jobbers and tunk* supplied at 
ufacturer*' pricea 187 W**t Fourth St.. 
u ‘ Cincinnati. 


CLOTHING. 


A FEW DOLLARS 


A few dollars go a long way in buying cloth¬ 
ing just now. A really good Overcoat at 
$6 50, better at $8, $9, $10, $12, all $3 50 to 
$8 less than former prices. Men's Suits, good 
quality, $8 50, $10, $12, reduced in same 
proportion. 

Pantaloons, of all the latest fabrics, $2, 

$2 50, $3, $3 50, $4, 84 50, $5: some great 
bargains in the lot aud a large stock to se¬ 
lect from. 

NEW SPRING OVERCOATS. 

NEW SPRING OVERCOATS. 

H. A. WITHERSPOON, 

OAK HALL ONE-PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, 

FOURTH J^JSTJD JUEZF-FIEIRSOnsr- 


fKjTABt,mran 1845.) 

F IRE and BU HOLAHtPKOOF SAFES. 

a u ui.i*Vv.icu record. Not au Balance on 
record w here one of Hail * Safe and Lock Co. e 
Bum lor* proof or tiro aud Burglar-proof Safe* 
l inf. been Curved open aud rubbed ol a dollar by 
burglar*. “We offer a reward ol rl.biiu for proof 
u, tue contrary. lib© Hail S»i» and Lock Co., 
_ CINCINNATI. 

(VsiABLiauich 1830.] 

FURNITURE. 

The Robt. Mitchell Furniture Co. have the 
largest furniture factory in the world. aud ship 
to ail quarter* of the civilised globe. Semi oV cl*, 
lu stamp* for Uieir manuuoui aud richly illus¬ 
trated catalogue reurescutiug nearly 8,‘XK) arti¬ 
cle* of fututture. Price* the luwmL raieiir'Hjin* 
197, 109, 111, 11 3 West Fourth n, Cincinnati. 

!Efl aBLIAUEO 1866. J 

CAS FIXTURESand LAMP GOODS. 
AiUatic and special Designs for lift* or Oil 
Fixture* furnished when dented. 
McHENRY A CO.. 

( East Fourth A IdUand 162 Main St.. 

CINCINNATI. 

IFstabusuxo 1842.) 

GOLD PENS. 

JOHN HOL 
J.ANL», Manu¬ 
facturer or Kino 
_Gold Pen*. Pen¬ 
cil Case*. Patent Pencil*, ftylefrapble and Foun¬ 
tain Pen*, 19 West Fourth bL, Cincinnati. 

Price LUta mailed free. 

)Erranu*HKO 1838.] 

GRATES AND MANTELS. 

W. W. MAG1LL A BOSS. Msniifactonrni. 

6, 7 and 8 Burnet Hour* Block. 
_ Third ft t.. writ of Vine, Cincinnati. 

[Estabusbmj xoii.J 

GROCERIES. 

M holesaie, Importing and Jobbing 

WM. GLENN A SONS, 

68, 79 and 72 Vine Street, 

Cincinnati, 

[£STA8USBXD 1867.) 

HATS, FURS and CLOAKS. 

“Headquarter* of Fashiou.” 

A. E. BUKKHaKDT* CO., 

113 IV eat Fourth bu. 

CINCINNATI. 

Order* by mall receive prompt attention. 
tEttiABLUiian 1564. J 

RANGES. 

Wrought Iron Portable Range* for Hotel 
and Family use, uod all ktudsof Hotel 
luiplsuiouia fur culinary purpose . 
The JNO.VAN itANuE CU„ JiAMl ACil Rj_K 8 
No . i o Ea*t F ourth Street . . Cincinn ati. 

lk*'iAJbui*ii*.u loui.j 

SHIRTS. 

bhiru made to order and ready made (our 
own make), bend for circular cuuuuuwg cut* 
ahowiug style* of Shiru, cellar* aud Guff*, 
formula for aeif-meamuieineut. 

A. J. CLakK. 

Fourth aud Ualuut htreeta, Cincinnati. 


IEstabuuheu 1843. j 

STARCH. 

The Matchless Braud “Nickel Gloss” laun¬ 
dry State h. 'I lie new idea, iu package parcels, 
that paralyse* competition 

ANDREW EKKENBRECHEK, 
Manufacturer, 12 and 14 lVe*t becund SL, 

_ _ Cincin nati. 

[L*lAbLl*ULU 1819.1 

STOVES. 

Xha ‘'Champion Monitor” Cooking Stove* 
aud luo “cliiton** and “Wituiaor'' 
Heating .*5 U»v#h. 

»M. KtSOH A CO., 

___ CINC IN N ATI. 

[EaiADusuKD 1664.j 

WATCH CASES. 

Mure than 690.0U0 i>wld and Silver Watch 
Canes. aU stamped •*DUEWEK,'' are uow iu tho 
pocket* of tue people, and all navuig one in tu. ir 
pu-M?»iuu esu te»i asburud that \uey uaw ttie 
very beat made. DUfc.14r.it WAlCil CASE .q -t.v- 
Ll! ALTERING CO., NtWToHT. jvV., 

O rPOttlTK CINCINNATI. 
[FiTAdLieAitb 1873. J 

WOOD WORKING MACHINERY 

Complete ouintaoi Machinery tor ruu.i’iiff 
WIUs, Cto-penter*. Furniture and Chair Factories 
uid all Wood-woriten», a*so for Car ItadroAd 
Shopa, also Baud Saw .'•nil* for cutting b'tn« 
Lumber. Adurut-b the Manufacturer*. 

COKDESMAN « EGAN CO M 
front, near Central Ave., cumutNAii, 


TEAS. 


FERMEN TED TEAS! 

In drawing public attention to Fermented Teoa we are aware that we are in 
advance of the Unu *, and that w»* shall have to eucounter very strong opposi¬ 
tion from people whose prejudice is stronger than tbelr rea-inn. 

Fermented Tsat. a* a rule. ar<» afaoluM;/ pur'*, besides being the rao*t 
wholesome. They nre pre*cnl>ed and used by the principal physicians in tills 
city. Fermented Tcoa are consumed by 4 >0,U0U,0'Jii out of a t *t:il of 3UO.OOO,- 
000 of p»»ople who drink ten In thi* case the majority must be right, a* Fer 
men ted Tea* nre a nriueipnl part of thefr daily food. 

Our Ruasiun Mixture at 76c per lb I* a pure Fermented T*a, and highly 
aromatic Kunrdan/v b.uglish. Irish and Scotch are delighted with this Tea be¬ 
cause it remind* tueni of “horns ” 


A. PON’DA SONS, 

TEA AND CO FEE MERCHANTS, 

330 Foixirtla. Avervae, JLiOia.le^y±llQ- 


COA1 


SPRING* WATER. 


JOS. WALTON & CO, 

Miners and Shippers of 

Screened l’i(tsl)iinr!i Coal! 


THE NEWS. 


Pittubnrir^LniDp, 14c.$:{ 50 

Pittsburgh Nut. 12c.3 (HI 

Screened for family us#. 

Sugar Loaf. Leiuch. Anthracite, at $9 00 per ton 

MAIN OFFICE: No. 250 Third St.. 

Between Main and Market. 

Special Rate* to Dealers aud Large Consumers. 

Telephone connections. d« 2 *i dtf 


BYMEjfc SPEED 

Miners? Shippers of Coal 

SCREENED FROM 11115 ELEVATOR. 

Pittsburgh. He. ....$3 5o 

Pittsburgh Nut, lk'c. . 3 00 

W ini l rede. iL’C.... . 3 o 0 

Laurel,' 1 o. •» 73 

Kentucky, 10c. 2 60 

Kentucky Nut, 8 c. 2 00 

Cauncl Coal INc,,. 4 69 

Crushed coke. j»er bushel.10c. 

Large Coke per bushel . yc. 

Lehigh Valley | 

ANTHRACITE ESSK 2 E£l: *> 30 p« Mo . 

\N tlkeoUure .. J 

Lehigh Anthracite.. $f> ffO per ton. 

Telephone conn«t.^r.lun. Main office 416 W. Jeff, n. 


PUMPS. 


PUMPS! 


WRECKING PUMPS: 

STEAM SIPHON PUMPS; 

STEAM FORCE PUMPS; 

POWER PUMPS, 

STEAM JET PUMPS; 

CHALLENGE FORCE PUMPS; 
METEOR FORCE PUMPS; 

STAR RAILROAD FORCE PUMPS; 
BLAKE'S FORCE PUMPS; 
COLUMBUS FORCE PUMPS; 

HAND FORCE PUMPS 

(Singl, and Double AcDng); 

DEEP-WELL PUMPS; 

CISTERN PUMPS; 

HYDRAULIC RAMS; 

DRIVE-WELL PUMPS AND POINTS 

(Pump* varying in capacity from 280 to 
40,009 gallon* per hour), etc., etc., 

For Sole by 

W. E DILLINGHAM & CO. 

421 West Mnin St reel, 

auSfteodtf LOUI8V1LLK, ICY. 


Flow*from the Maximum M ueral Fountain of 
Saratoga .Springs, aud ie In the opinion of the 
most eminent medical un*n Nature's Sovereign 
Cun* lor < oii*tio«ilui«, l)y*p**s»*ia, l orpnj Liver, 
limcilvr Coiidlili n* ol lit** Kid nr \ *. and a most 
salutary alterative in scrofuloit* affection*. \t ItH 
ladies, geimeKmn nrnl bon vivauta evervwljt-re 
it bn* become the standard of dietary expedient*, 
fortifying the digestive fiuictions and enabling 
fn'e-hvens to iminlg with impunity at table. The 
world of wealth, intelligence and refinement tes- 
tlliea to it* %pnikiing. n.vuiullv purr and delight- 
lul qualities a* the beverage im'omparable, and 
accredit it with being the aurr*t eul speediest 
so time ol clmreomplejtlons. high ■ sIHi gw) ex- 
uberant •qiirlts. lialliorn Spring Vlalrr la sold 
only in glas* bottles; four dozen pint* are pocked 
in a cane. It may be ohtaiueu at all hotel*, and 
of druggist*, ulue merchants and eroeers every¬ 
where K. H. HaTHUKN. Ml uorn Springs, 
Saratoga. N V. mr3 MoJH 


PLOWS. 


THOS.MEIKJLE^cc 

tOVIS VILLEJiY. o 


Monroe Street, between Tenth and Twelfth. 

Sentl tor price list and circulars. 

*efl eodtf-lp 


MKDICAL. 


YALU1BLE IHFORSlTlOa 


-TO- 


HAKDWARE. 


W.B. BELKNAP & GO. 


SPRING GOODS 



Drain Tools, 

fftollTOffS, 

Fsice Wire 

IN EVERY VARIETY. 

Nails, 

Bar Iron. 

W. B. BELKNAP & CO. 


STEAMSHIPS. 


CUNARD LINE. 

^ITEERAGB RAT&S fro.n Queenstown to Now 
O lojx, UL Apply w J* IX O'LEARY, 
Franklin Bank, -15 rifts is. 
Dran* on Dahlia,* iU wiLj fee mi, 


PERSONS SUFFERING WITH DISEASES 

OF THE 

Liver, Kidneys and Bladder. 


Indications— For Teiumuu* and the Ohio 
taUry, warmer t fair \ralhcr, variable trim ft, 
shifting to tK/ulheaiterty, dimirmh inff, pre 
<vr led in the eautern part by increasing 
pressure. _ • 

Bihhop Clarkson continut 1 * critically 
ill at Oamlm. 

Twelve persons were killed by a snow- 
slide at Alta, Utah, Saturday. 

Speakfr Carlisle will be the irucst of 
the Free-trade Club of New York Satur¬ 
day. ____ 

Titk Fit7. John Porter Bill comes up 
among the special orders in the Senate, 

Monday. _ ' 

Within the next 48 hours 8,500,000 
bushel* of coal will be shipped South 
from Pittsburgh. 

In the House to-rlay Mr. Morrison will 
report from the Ways and Munns Com¬ 
mittee the Tariff Bill agreed upon by the 

majority. ___ 

A full list of the Kentucky claimants 
who have succeeded in their deraaucU upon 
the Treasury is printed in the Washington 

dispatches._ 

An infernal machine carefully wrapped 
and addressed to the Comte de Purls was 
discovered by the officials before it reached 
its destination. 



Read the following extraots from tho U. S. and 
American DUperisatories. Hiowing the uteJlcmai 
virtue* of Buobu and Poreira Brava: 

“Buchu is gently stimulant, with a peculiar 
tendency to tno urinary organ*, producing diu¬ 
resis. aud like all *1 ntiur medicines, exciting di¬ 
aphoresis when circumstance* favor this effect. 
The Hottentot* have Joug cued it in a variety of 
di*ea«*s. From these rude practitioner*, the 
remedy was borrowed by the resident Engli u 
anti Dutch pnymcUti*. by whose recommenda¬ 
tion it was employed iu Eurooe, and ha* come 
Into general use. It I* given chielty it com- 
piaint* of the urinarv organ*, such os Gravel. 
Chronic Catarrh of the Bladder, an I mor¬ 
bid irrita ioii of tne Bladder and Urethra. 
Disease of tne Prostate, and Retention or Incon¬ 
tinence of the I’rlne, from a Joui of tone in the 
parts concerned in it* evacuation It has also 
been recommended in Dyspepsia. Chronic Rheu¬ 
matism. Cutaneous AffecUous and Dropsy.” 

’Tareira Brava is tonic, aperient and diuretic. 
It wna introduced into European practice *0 
long ago as IU88, and enjojod great reputation 
ana lit non trip tic. ill* recommended in Calcu¬ 
lous Affection*. Chronic lull •limitation and Fleer- 
atlon of the Kidnevs aud lUaddnr. Leucorriiea. 
Dropsy and Jaundice. The pun* >*e for which 
it 1* at present chiefly emptoved i* for the relief 
of chronic diseases of the urinary passages, . ir 
BenjaminB rojie found U very useful iu Chronic 
Intluinmation of the Bladder, in allaying irrita¬ 
bility of that organ and correcting the disposi¬ 
tion to profu*»o mucous secretion; and it ha* * 110 - 
Hequrnlly come into general use in the same af¬ 
fections Great advantage may altm be de¬ 
rived I rorn combining it. iu this complaint, with 
other diuretic*. ” 

Wintcr-smiUr* Extract of Buchu and Pareirs 
Brava ba* all me virtues of fresh Buchu Leaves, 

6 really increased in Us efficacy bv being com- 
tued with the oth r ingrediuuu il’areira Bravo, 
Cubehs, Junii*er Berne* and Spirits of Nitre) iu 
such a way a* to add greatly 10 Its curative pow¬ 
er. It is a certain remedy for all disease* of me 
Bladder. Kidneys. ur..v*l, Dropaical >willing, 
etc. It ho* curud every case of Diabetes iu 
which it has been given, it is a sued he remedy 
for diseases of lhal'rodate Gland, Retention of 
the Urine. Mucous Disch 1 res Beet, IrriUlion 
of tne Bladder, in short, for oil disease* of the 
Urinary organ*, whether existing in male or fe¬ 
male. For many uisum-am peculiar to females it 
i» of great -orvlc»*. and e*p«?cially *0 is it at that 
period ten nod CHANGE I.v LIFE. For Cloned * 
or Hcteulion. Irregularity, 1‘mufulnc-s nr titis- 
pemdoa of Uaual 1 enod*. Ulcerated «u»t.- of ttio 
Utarus, LeUcorrhea or Wnltes, it u a specific 
remedy. It is a certain cure for Bed-wetting in 
Children. For weakness arising from early in- 
diM'retion. excess In youth, and diadimtiuii, it 
will be found a specific. 

U1* not a *e»:ret nostrum, hut I* recommended 
and proueribed by our leading physician*. For 
Rale bv oJi druggists. Manufactured by C, H. 
Wnmawnrr*. 

Abtuuk Bcjkr A Co., Louisvllls, Ky., General 
Whoicools Agsat*. f«3 dtX 


The IiulinnH tempornnee people clnim 
that 5,800 citizens of thai State—only a 
partial poll—have declared their intention 
to vote fora straight prohibition ticket. 

Col. John P. Barrett, editor of the 
Hartford Herald, in an interview with a 
Courier-Journal reporter gives his side 
of the damage stilt against the L. and N. 
railroad for being ejected from one of their 
poKseuger oraches. 

Washington has extended a hearty re¬ 
ception to Henry Iuvino and Ellen 
Terry, invitations haviug crowded in on 
them from the leading political and socie¬ 
ty people. Mr. Ikying will return to 
AmcricA in the autumn uuder liis own 
management. 

Mr. WlLBUR F. Browder, of Bussell- 
vllle, replies in another column to the 
series of lurid charges preferred against 
him by Mr. Hi gh Barclay, Jil, in the 
Anchorage Asylum investigation. Mr. 
Browder is out* of the foremost lawyer* 
in Kentucky, aud his private and public 
life is above ail reproa* h. 

A New York special to the Courier- 
Journal indicates that Senator Miller, 
Collector Robertson, George William 
Curtis and other prominent New York 
politicians have effected an organized op¬ 
position 10 President Arthur and will 
fight hia nominutiou vigorously. It Is said 
they claim that the President cun not carry 
New York if the Republicans put him at 
the head of the ticket. 


ASSAULT AND ROBBERY. 


A Colored Ocacbman Brutally Assaults a Young 
Lady at New York, and with the Aid 
of the Black Servant Girl 
Robs the House. 


THE PRECIOUS P- IR ARRESTED. 

New York, March 9.—The police to-day 
arrested Jesse Williams, a negro coachman, 
and Gertrudo Ash, a colored servant, his al¬ 
leged accomplice, in one of the most brutal 
assaults and lialtoritB perpetrated in this 
city since the Hull murder in 1878. 
The victim of the assault was Miss 
Maggie Harvey, aged eighteen, and a sis¬ 
ter of Mm. George Sloane, whtwe husband 
is a prominent merchant of this city, and 
who occupy a flat iu a large bouse ou West 
Twenty-second street and Broadway. Ger¬ 
trude Ash was a servant in the family, and 
wo* regarded a* au industrious and bouu*t 
girl. 

Saturday evening Mr. arid Mrs. Sloane 
went out. leaving Miss Harvey in charge of 
her little niece, two and a half year* old. 
Mi»s Harvey retired about 10:30. Sloane’* 
little girl slept with her. In tho bed-room 
was a large closet. Miss Harvey b*d just 
retired when she heard a strange itoine, and 
looking around she saw the clouet-door 
swing open and Williams sprang forward and 
grasping her by the throat threatened to 
kill her if she made an outcry. The commo- 
t on awakened the child, and it began to 
cry. Williams threatened to lake it* life if 
Mis* Harvey did not make it keep *tUl. Ho 
th»n demanded to know where the monoy 
was kept, and ordered her to give him the 
keys of tiie various rooms, with the most 
brutal threats if she did not obey him. 

When she said she did not know where the 
things were kept, be dragged her from bed, 
still retaining bis grasp upon h4r throat, and 
threw her viulently on the floor. He stuffed 
a handkerchief into her mouth and tiod 
towel securely around her head, fastened her 
hands behiud her and tied her feet. Ho then 
ransacked tho apartments, packing up what¬ 
ever he found of value and escaped by way 
of a window, which led to thu Are escape. 

Mr. and Mrs. Sloane returned ab >ut 11:30 
and noticed the disordered condition of the 
dining-room and >u>pecteti something wrong 
Thoy went to Miss Harvey’s room and found 
her a* above stated, unconscious, and she 
must soon have died of suffocatio*. .She was 
with difficulty restored to consclounnesa and 
told hsr story. Her body was covered with 
bruise* and marks. Her brutal treatment 
was plainly visible about her ne**k. She was 
iu a very critical condition to day. 

The police were promptly summoned, and 
Capt. \Y .Hiatus, with three detective*, ar¬ 
rived. They soon found that the tire-esuape 
led to the room occupied by Gertrude Ami, 
the colored servant. The window was part¬ 
ly open and a detective en lured. He found 
Williams under the bod. Ou going down 
stairs Williams made frantic efforts to es¬ 
cape, but several blows upon his bead w ith a 
billy subdued him and he was handcuffed 
and taken to the police station. Gertrude 
Ash was al*<> arrested and locked up. She 
denied that she knew Wiihams, and said she 
was ignorant of his presence in the house. 
It is learned, however, from °th*‘ negro 
colony" tuat William* and the girl were 
considered engaged. William* is *31 years 
old and Adi 19. About $t»OU worth of Jew¬ 
elry aud silverware were found in a pillow¬ 
case in the servant’s room. 


TliE STOCK MARKET 


During' the Past Week Has Alter¬ 
nated Betweeu Remarkable Ac¬ 
tivity aud Utter Stagnation. 


Vanderbilt, in the Absence of Gould, 
f ume to the Front aa 
a Leader, 


Squeezed the B*or« Badly and Then Ban 
the Market Up Foar 

Per Cent, 


Leading Events of tho Week, the Trunk¬ 
line Trouble and Heavy Gold 
Shipments. 


-A. BXfcOIv ER’S COMMISSION. 


An OlUrrr .Munlrrrd 

Cincinnati, March lb— At Wilmington, 
Clinton county, Ohio, nt 7 o'clock In*t uv-it- 
ing. City Marshal John T. Vandoren was 
iihot in tin* bead, and killed in&tautlv, by 
Alfred Ballard, a drunken man, when uuder 
arrest and on the way to prison in charge of 
the Marshal. It required great discretion to 
prevent tho crowd from lvucbing Ballard 
while on the w ay to jail aft^r the murder. 
As it was, soma person uukuowucut Ballard 
in the sido. 


f.Vn^r/of to th 0 Conner* Journal A 
New York, March 9.—The stock market 
last week alternated between rtmiarkabla ac¬ 
tivity and utter stagnation. In the absence 
of Mr. Gonld, Mr. Vanderbilt has come to 
the front as tbu leader. In the early part of 
the week he squeezed the bear* bailljT, after 
Deacon White got through, and ran the 
market up 8 or 4 i>er cent. Then came in¬ 
activity. One day the room-traders deter¬ 
mined not to do anything, ami the conse¬ 
quence was that less than 100,000 
share* were dealt in. The tremendous gold 
shipments invited them into the market 
again, and they sold ou Friday with some 
profit. 

The short interest is pretty large, but it is 
more timid than at tiny previous time. The 
experience of a week ago in Lackawanna, 
and in almost every active stock this week, 
has considerably dLoouragcd the bears. 
They say they are willing to ri*k their money 
agamst a rise on tilt general condition of 
trade and Lusiness, but they can not afford 
to trade against the odds of a market in 
wnich almost every stock is virtually cor¬ 
nered. The leading boar* are entirely out 
of the market, os far as any systematic at¬ 
tack on it is concerned, and they will do 
nothing for the moment. This leave* the 
bulls iu rather ou unp)eo>ant position. They 
have more stocks than they want aud no 
buyers for them. 

Nothing more is heard about the public 
buying stock*. That idea has becoiuo too 
ridiculous even for street talk. Since tho 
abscuco of Jay Gould tho situation ha* 
changed decidedly. As a leader Mr. Gmild 
was full of prices and successful strokes, 
which animated the street with confidence. 
Every one had faith that whatever Mr. 
Gould undertook he would accomplish. In a 
day he converted the U-srroom traders; he 
brought m a few outside speculators; 
be put up the market, ns he said he 
would. Ou Wall street Mr. Gould is 
not beloved greatly, but be inspires the army 
of professional operator* when he is in ear- 
nrst as a great aud popular genera1 iioo* hie 
troop*. 

Rumors that George Gould bds orders to 
pursue the same line of tactics hi* father 
adopted have not last week developed much 
energy on the part of the Gould forces. 

Washington E. Connor &aid publicly yes¬ 
terday that he thought the market ought 
to go off a few point* more be¬ 
fore it w«s taken hold of for 
an upward turn, and the Gould stocks, even 
the boasted Missouri Pacific, have not been 
supported. 

The brunt of the fight seems to have fallen 
on Mr. Vanderbilt, who, with his sons, did 
all that w'a* done on the bull tide last week. 
If Mr. Vanderbilt is not an Ideal speculator 
he has plenty of cash, which is the one great 
requisite', and a good deal of pig-headed 
obstinacy. If ho got* "m6d," the market 
will go up aud the bears will give up the 
flight. Lost autumn some of the newspapers 
said one of Mr. Vanderbilt’s sons had lost 
money and the old gentleman got so angry 
that he ran up the market 4 or 5 per cent. 
Mr. Vanderbilt has a violent antipathy to 
beans, which ho inherited from the Commo¬ 
dore, and he delight* when they got into 
trouble. This week will dLcloso what Mr. 
Vanderbilt can do with the stock 
market. His friends talk very strongly 
of a great advance and some 
sensational features in the grangers; but per¬ 
haps, after all, tho great millionaire will 
content himself with protecting this and 
other .-ecuritioi* until the r« turn of Gould. 

The two leading events of the week were 
the renewed trunk line troubles anil the 
heavy shipments of gold There may nut 
lie any disturbance of trunk hue harmony 
just now, but pence will never lie 
insured until the questions between the 
iiue» are arranged upon an amicable 
aud ju«t basis. NotwitUKtaruling tho fact 
that the PreeiUvuL* of the different roads in 
the pool are personally responsible under t he 
Inst agreement for the umiutenance of rate*, 
it is kn >wn to ovtrv *hipj>er that conces¬ 
sions are made by all the road*. The mer¬ 
chant* of Baltimore liavo protested that (hi* 
cutting ha* greatly injured th«* trade of th t 
city, and they have petitioned Mr. Garrett 
to see that the pool rates are enforced or 
to prevent the discrimination by a greater 
cut in rate* on the Baltimore and Ohio. Mi. 
Garrett at once came to New York aud spent 
a day with Commissioner Fink, who will 
good-on tu redlv settle the difficult v for a day 
or two. Meantime, the West Bhore is said 
to be offering ticke; * to Chicago at a less 
price than it should ns a conscientious pool 
member. President Hubert*' position iu 
reference to tbo pool bn* caused 
a pood deal of misgiving, and many 
people believe an open rupture will soon oc¬ 
cur. It* occurrence is simpler a question of 
time, uniess the road* in iho pool speedily 
come to time on their agreement*. 

The shipments of gold during the last three 
week* amount to nearly ten millions of 
dollar*. Some bankers estimate tuat 
million* more will go. aud the bears say 
fullv 50 millions will Im» *hip]ied liefore July 
1. The extraordinary shipment* of yesterday 
are due to the scarcity of commercial bill*, 
the higher rate of interest abroad, and prob¬ 
ably some shipments to affect the price of 
stock*. There is a decidedly bettor fooling 
among bauki’is, whoa fow' week* ago were 
alarmed at the threatened gold tduptmmL*, 
unit the complications growing out of the 
silver question. It is now unde mood that 
tbe Secretary of the Treasury bus no fear> of 
a dangerou* decrease in his gold resources, 
and Assistant Treasurer Acton expresses 
tho opinion that he wilt not bo compelled to 
offer silver to settle bis balances at the clear¬ 
ing-home this year. At least among tho 
bankers tbcrw is a general tee ing that if the 
country loses |30,UUU,UtiO or $4v,0()0,000 «»f 
gold, it will result ini no permanent norm, the 
only effect, they *ay, would bo to advance 
the rate of interest. 

Mr. Baldw in, of tho Fourth National Bank, 
said yealerd y that the rate for uiurcauUle 
paper was one-bnlf pur cant, higher 
than it had been, ( all money is still ahno-t 
dirt cheap. After a broker offered 610,000 
ff.it ou tbe Exchange, another one pleaded in 
mock pity tor some one to take $50,000 nr, 
l per cent. Never m the history of any 
nation ha* money b*vu so cheap. As the 
spring trade ojxm* a hardening of 
ratv* is inevitable. .Speculation is 
vary uncertain. Whim thu room 
trader* decline to trada tho great 
majority of tho men on tne street expect a 
violent drop in prices. They compare the 
market t<» the "pegging day* of old," and 
almost hourly oxpeel the beginning of a de¬ 
pression greater than has beau seen. Not¬ 


withstanding Go* 

Iic vo he ha* sold 
still selling, mid j* 
derbill uncerenu ^ 
ly denied by Got 
The most cnco 


irotestations, they be¬ 
lt many stocks and is 
ie ha* iigam left Van- 
t y. This 1 * mdignaut- 
r lends. 

ig signs for the bulls 


are the general lnnrun*e in the re|M)rted earn¬ 
ings of railroad* far the fourth week of Feb¬ 
ruary, and tho indication* of lower price* 
for grain The extreme dullness of tnis w ek 
has revived taik of the old subject of brokers’ 
commissions. Tho charge to a buyer and 
seller of stock i* one mghthuf 1 per cent, 
each way. or $25 on 100 *lmres. Tho rules of 
the Stock Exchange require this charge 
to ttentacle under severe penally, and no out¬ 
sider can get any conce*Mon. Homo of the 
younger broker* are in fuvor of loss restric¬ 
tion in the matter of commL*ion. 

"If tho rule* were changed," said a lead¬ 
ing broker, "the Stock Exchange busmens 
would be quadrupled. An outsider has got 
to have 1 per i*ent. fluctuation to make 
it worth while for him to go in. Now, if 
he could got rid of the onerous commission 
of of 1 per c» nt., he could afford to do 
thive or lour time* the t miner* he doe*. 
The room trader*, who have no commissions 
to pav. are sstintied with K or per cent, 
profit, and they do n groat deal or the busi¬ 
ness, getting in and out quickly. 1 think a 
reduction would add to thu revenues of the 
brokers and greatly increase business." 

Littsm i* nr hie s.\ofr. 


Twelve Prmoii* tidied IIy a Know-slide at 
Alta, L'lali—The Bodies All Recovered But 

Ollr. 

Balt Lake, March 9.—At 6:30 Friday 
night the seventh snow slide, half a mile 
wide, extending from the summit down, at 
Alta, swept away tbe works of the new 
Emma Mine. The following were killed: 
Gus. Lyberkeb, foreman. 

D. I). WARSON, machinist. 

J. H. W arson. 

Bamitkl Fultherr. 

Charles Colgrkkn and wife. 

Edward Crocket. 

Lottie Pleon. 

O. J.Johnson. 

N. S. Delano. 

Willard Stephenson. 

John Hicuakdbon. 

Tlio bodies were all covered except one. 
It was tiio worst slide ever known in Little 
Cottonwood,' tbe snow piling 40 feet high. 
The damage* to tbe miue Is $15,000. The 
storm waa t o bad to bring the bodies down. 
Of tho killed, several leave families. George 
Culiius, Superin ten dent of the mine, camo 
down to-day, bringing Iho first new* of the 
disaster. 

Til E IltOS AN 19 St E EL H VS MS MS 3 

Forth«*Pa«t Week Hallirr Light and Price* 
llutr Khown LthlcuucN 11I \\ r«t>lira*. 

|Nr>c.'»u to thr Courier*jonrnut.\ * 

Philadelphia, March 9.—-The volume of 
business m iron and steel for tbe past week 
has been rather light, aud price*, iu several 
directions, have shown evidences of weak¬ 
ness. Consumer* arc still buying in a retail 
way, seeing no reason lor stocking up in ibe 
present condition of things. Production of 
pig irou ha* not been decreased, and it is 
even rauioied that Home additional luruaces 
will blow out, but this is scarcely probable at 
present. The bar mills are fairly employed 
a* a general thing, aud a lew are well s* Id 
up, but the iiioichaut-iiuu trade ie not as ac 
live as was ex|>ected, aud muuufoetursr* an* 
not willing to Block up, especially a* tue 
prices for crude iron are not general.y 
considered settled Foundery iron* 
have been selling all the way from $£0 to 
$<2i 50 for No. 1, No. 2 average* $19 aud 
gray forge $18 at tidewater. There are evi¬ 
dence* of a speculative movement as soon os 
prices shall liave reached tue lowest possible 
limits. Bessemer pig 1* quoted at 8^0; 
muck bars have sold in small lots at about 
$33, with an occasional lot going at 50c to 
75c les-*; blooms are in fair demand at the 
usual figures. Nail* have not im 
proved iu demand; quotations are slid $2 50 
to $*~i BU, but them utv some offer* ul 40 
which may possibly be taken in a short 
time. 

A Urge amount of building will be com¬ 
menced as soon as tho weather permit', but 
the uail making capacity is so enormous that 
price* are likely to remain at least ns low as 
they now an?. Buyers of steel rails are still 
holding Imck, and makers ure no less firm 
ttiau they have been for a mouth past. Hav¬ 
ing their capacity ho well engaged, they 
can afford to hold to their prices. 
Largo hds of rails could be placed at 
buyer*’ terms, but makers will not listen to 
any offers under $34 at present. Old mil* 
nre under active inquiry, and negotiations 
are pending tor some lot* for shipment to 
tno interior. Quotations here, $Si2 50 to 
$&3. Crop-end* are wanted, but stock* are 
not available at buyer*’ price*. Plate and 
tank iron* have been moving in small lots; 
some large contracts for structural iron for 
bridge work have been closed, and there am 
large reqnireuieiiU which must be filled with 
in a mouth. Prices are quoted a* they have 
been for several week*. IhjL wnw concessions 
will probably be allowed on tb»* largo bust- 
nevs aliout to be placed. Merchant -.te+d is 
in active demnnil and mill* are doing a gicat 
dual of businevi, but profits are very light. 
Merchant bar is selling freely in small lots nt 
1.90<g£c for refiiwd; there nr© offer* at 
1.80c: common iron sell* at country mill* at 

1.70(31.80c._ 

onto HORSEH HIEVE3. 

They ftteal a Horae and Buggy and Are 
Pursued l>> rill/.* na. 

,$r>eriaJ to the Conner-JournnlA 
Middletown, O., March 9.—The gang of 
horse-thieves, who have been getting in their 
work for some time iu the neighborhood of 
Carrollton and Mianmburg, Ohio, made an¬ 
other raid at 2 o’clock tbi9 morning, and 
succeeded in gotting away with a large dark 
bay horse, sixteen hands high, and a fine top- 
buggy, the property of Levi Huffman, a 
wealthy farmer, living near Miamisburg. 
The police of this city were notified 
of the theft this morning, and are 
on the lookout for the stolen property. It 1* 
without doubt the work of the same gang 
who stole a homo and buggy near Carrollton 
last week, nnd w ho have been workina that 
vicinity all winter. The bor» and buggy 
stolen this morning are valued at $300. 

The farmer* of tb© surrounding country 
are very indignant, and are talking of organ¬ 
izing th«?ms©ivc» into a body, with a strong 
determination to pursue nnd capture the 
whole gang, and will spare no ©fforte to pun- 
i*h them to the full exteiit of the law. 

men e r l r.vr // ers. 

Thrlr Trial ( onil'iurd un Account ol Impor¬ 
tant M iinrurt. 

\Soeeinl to the Courirr-Journal.} 

New Lkxin<*t*>N, O., March 9.—The 
cases of the eleven persons tn jail upon tho 
charge of lynching Richard Hickey, which 
was to be beard before Justice Porter to¬ 
day, wo* continued until to-morrow, on mo¬ 
tion of counsel for tbe State, on account of 
th© absence of imi»ortant witnesses. 

Th© Court of Common Plea* will also con¬ 
vene to-morrow. 

It Is currently reported bore tbi* evening, 
on w bat appear* to b© good authority, that 
if the |HT*»n* now iu jail charged with 
lynching Hickey aro held at tho prelimi¬ 
nary hearing lo-raorrow', their friends will 
take measure* to have otner person* arrested 
who an* now at large, but alleged to In* us 
cul|»al»l© as those now in jail. The persou* 
now iu custody say they vs ill not !»© rnero 
suaj»egontfi in connection with the tragedy at 
Head vllle. 

4 oal 4 ••min^ 

PlTTSBL’RGll, March 9.—The coal men are 
making preparations to send out 3.500.UDO 
bushels of coal in th© next forty-eight hours. 
The steamer Mark Winnett tonight sank 
three barges, containing 3(3,000 bushels. 


WASHINGTON-IRVING. 


How the Distinguished Actor and 
Miss Terry Were Received at 
the Capital City. 


What the New York Tribune Will 
Say About the Tariff 
Bill’s Chances. 


Kentuckians Whose Claims Have Been 
Reported Favorably Upon by tbe 
Offioers of tbe Treasury. 

A Decrease In Card Issues Since the 
Cheaper Postal Rates Went 
Into Effect. 


GENERAL CAPITAL NEWS 


fSwrisi to the Corn ier*Journal.} 

Washington. March 9.— Mr. Irving has 
Certainly every reason to foul satisfied with 
his reception in W asbington. He expressed 
hi* feeling* gracefully in bis speech before 
thi* curtain when recalled for th© third time 
at the end of “Louis Xi.“ last n.ght. In hi* 
brief remarks ho was particularly careful to 
speak of Miss Terry, wha&e name was 
greeted with great applause. Mr. Irving 
mad© tho pleasant announcement that 
he would return to this country early next 
nuturnn. Ho ha* made up his mind to reap 
th© golden harvest while it is ripe. He will 
take back to London something like $ 200 ,- 
000 w ith him this year. Next year he will 
be bis own manager and pocket all tbe 
profits. 

Mr. Abbey was anxious to continue as his 
manager, and offered him a considerable ad¬ 
vance on last season’s figures, but Mr. 
Irving declined. The two gentlemen sat lip 
nearly all of Monday night at tho Arlington 
arranging the lease of the Lyceum Theater, 
which Mr. Abbey is to have again next win¬ 
ter, that being entirely satihfaclory to Mr. 
Irving. 

No actor was ever so entertained in Wash¬ 
ington a* Mr. Irving ha* been. Ho attended 
a supper at the Metropolitan Clnb chi 
Wednesday* evening; a breakfast given 
by Mr. Bavard on Thursday*; a supner 
given to Mr. Blaine and a party of 
inends on Thursday evening, and after the 
olay he wa» tho guest of Mr. Wna. Walter 
I’hidp*. 1 in Friday morning ho attended a 
htipiM«r given to nun l»v Mr. Dji*Khrdmer. On 
Friday evening and lost night he was tho 
f’revtiient's guest. 

A* stated. Miss Terry hns received more 
attentions tier© than iu*any other American 
city. 

77.S’ CHANCES. 

A RKPCMLIC4X VIEW OF THE CHANCES TIIE 

MUttKlMJX HILL UAH uK FAHHlNO THE 

HOU8K. 

l$p©rto to the Courier*Journal.] 

Washington, March 9.—^Your corre¬ 
spondent ho* the privilege to-night of u“ing 
the New York 'tribune's peclal from here on 
th© cluuicr© liK-Moir je.fi Ta.iff Hill has of 
pa-Miig Hi*- Houso. It is given to allow thu 
two sides of the question. It will be refresh¬ 
ing idling to R publican* for tho present. 
After Morrison'* Lull i* pa-*ed, however, it 
will not lie so refreshing. But read: 

It isicHlcetbl* that ■» rdlv a Democrat who Is 
opp-. - d la tile hill will permit tne use <»r lus 
n roe in uuy statefs nt of in> position, ami all of 
thrill ap|n*a to l © lixikhig ior«ard w.tb coudd- 
entliir- anxiety 10 is»e action of a caiictl*. In 
which it im IiojhmI some sort of truce may b© 
patched up to tide ih* party over until thread 
of tne session an 1 me jfevtembliug of til© 
National 1 onvetuion. It snould not h© 
forgot leu that there are only n lew in.mo.r i > in 
C'ougre*-. who os a matter of gonernl political 
policy IiWur protection of tmm icxu iu.fudri©*. 
u lien tne Ktntemeut van made that 60 Dem¬ 
ocrat* will vote against the Moruiscm bill. It In¬ 
cludes probably 4 u men, stun© ..f whom Ixfiiev© 
mat uuy action now uMl be injurious to Demo¬ 
cratic pro*|rf*cts, while tiie remainder represent 
local In-i i -trie which would he UlHOstioucly af¬ 
fected by the bilL 

It a large ttuuioer of influential Democrats did 
not Leii©re that the . 1 > ctoral votes of 6©w York, 
New Jersey, ‘ 'ultfonna aud W est Virginia are 
nhsoluteh necessary to 'Democratic suoee-s, tho 
.Morrtsoii mil would pav. the House without 
much difficultly. It Is true that Col Morrison, 
Henry Waller* m and some other leading Demo¬ 
crats insist that ou the square issue of ‘•tariff ro- 
fomi 'tlio Democrats «-an offset probable lo«*c* 
m the Mates mentioned by gains In the West; 
hut thev do not seem to bo able to nubuo tnativ 
person* wiito that belief. 

It seems probable th at In th© cautriia two plan* 
will be urged. Col. Morrison, nnd his friends 
will be likely to exhibit a iplrlt of « a oncessiou a* 
todetafis: but. at the sum© time, will insist, that 
th© majority, which organised tn© lions© on th© 
issue of •revenue reform,” can not afford to b© 
false to Its pledges to the people, and ©tultlfy 
itself by abandoning a tariff bill reported oy a 
Ways a.al Mcatu Committee deliberate)* orgun- 
ix«i| with u view to tiriff revision. 

To f hi* Mr RstuJair mid hi* follower© will prob¬ 
ably reply that th© lime is not propitious for 
such act.on; that the utterance* of the Demo- 
'cr.ttie ntM.fpapers in Virginia and Georgia indi¬ 
cate a strong uu.l growing feeling In the South 
against making tbe attitude ol any D©m *cral 
toward* tbe tariff a te*t of UN party ft*ait) ; that 
the results of tbe spring elections in Venn*) Wan ia 
and New York, and of th© 1 ongrosalonal 
special ©lection in Kansas tend to ahow that 
tiler© t* ti - geuerhl public demand for tariff leg- 
isl.tO'.u at tins *c-siou; tlidi, whether it be trua 
or f d*e. the agitation of the tariff question in 
(_’<j ugres* i* regarded by the busmens Interest of 
the country a* Die chief caws© of the general de¬ 
pression in many branches of trade and indut- 
try, and is tuus endangering the prottpecu 
of Democratic success in tbe Frexi.iential 
election, that it Is not the Uu y of a majority of 
the House of it’-presenULtives to i-ass a tariff 
bill which th© Senate would not act upon, for 
mi h ctiun .look! o© an attempt by leas than 200 
Democratic liepre-« 11 talives, elected two years 
ago. to forestall the action of a National Lon- 
venticn t-» be composed ol delegate- fredi from 
the p. ople. aud, tnerefoie. that tbe Morriftoo 
bill, however modified, ought not to be 
pressed at this time at the imminent risk of a se¬ 
rious division in the rank* of the uiajouty of lb© 
House. 

Perbap* these and Ilk© arguments and consid¬ 
eration* may tempt Cnairman Morrison and 
other men in th® caucus who a re aspirants for 
the Democratic Presidential nomination, but the 
chances seem to b© that they will have 
lit lit- weight with such men as Hurd, 
iduukburu. Springer, Mills and other* of 
the same sort, and if a vote I* taken on the Mor¬ 
rison bill in the caucus, it will be auopted If 
that be don© and tue free Ital be opposed, there 
will not be 6U Democratic vote* ogaim-t It in the 
House. Probably, however, enough Democrats 
will b** found to brave the edict of the caucus, 
who by voting with th© Republican* cau defeat 
the Morrison oil! They will not be required to 
face that alternative until ©r -ry other expedient 
lot* been exhausted and ©very r.-sourcs of party 
discipline brought i" orar upon tuem. 

NEWS NOTES. 

KEIFIR’S CONVENTION OF LIARS, ETC.— 
. HPXAKEIt CARLISLE TO DINE WITH THE 

FREE-TRADE CLUB. 

ISp^cirtl to the Courier*Journal.) 

Washington, March 9.—Th© Capital of 
to day bhvs Keifer’s convention of liar* and 
jail bird* will probably finish it* work and 
adjourn tin* week. Tbe penitentiaries yawn 
for tbeui. 

Speaker Carlisle has accepted an invltatlou 
from the Fw-trada Club of New York to 
dine with tbom on Saturday next. He will 
b© the guest of Mr. Manton Marble, with 
whom h© will dine ou Sunday. 

ISDIASAjeOUS NOTES. 

SOME TALK OK PAYNE AT WASHINGTON, BIT 

tf DONALD IS THE FAVORITE PRESIDENTIAL 

CANDIDATE. 

f Special to the Courier*Journal.) 

Washington, Mnrch 9.—Tho temperance 
people have put “foclurs" out to get at the 
feasibility of running a prohibition ticket 
this fall in Indiana, provided lion© of the 
parties a .opt prohibition a* an issue and 
nominate a ticket in favor of it. 80 far 
5,800 people have signified their willing- 






















































































































































































THE COURIER-JOtHNAL: LOUISVILLE. MONDAY, MARCH W, 1*8-1. 


ness to vote for a straight prohibi¬ 
tion ticket. Similar letters are com lug 
in at the rate of from 200 to 300 per day. 
It is estimated that the total wUl foot up2 >, 
000. ’Hie convent! *n will not be called if 
either partv declare* for prohibition and 
nominate* candidates in sympathy with tbo 
movement. . . 

Hon. Geo. W. Julian has returned from 
Washington. He tavs that they talk of 
Payne some in Washington but chiefly oi 
McDonald for the Presidency. 


KENTUCKY CLAIMANTS. 

A LIAT OF THOSE WHO BAT* HAD THEIR 
claims reported favorably UPON. 

[Special to the Ctiui'^ev-Journal A 
Washington, March 9.—Tha following is 
a Ust of the claimants residing In Kentuc ky 
whose claims have been reported favorably 
by tho accounting officers of the Treasury: 
To John B. Auxisr. of Johnson county. $106 50 
To Gilbert Adams, of Magoffin county. 

To IL B. Ashby, of Hopbius county 
To Harden Bramlenbnrgh and Sitni*on 
Brwodenbunrh. of Owslevcount' 

To Mary A. Bodkiu. of Shelby county.. 

To William Boll, of Logan county 
To John M. Montgomery, administra¬ 
tor of Eliza belli Bryuu, deceased, **f 

Shelby county . 

To Decatur Beatty, of L**»* county 
To Thos. P Burton, of Pulaski county. 

To Mrs Pallia H. Bedluner, adminis¬ 
tratrix of Wm Holldway. deceased. 

of Fayette county .. 3.13® 00 

ToC. H. Moses, administrator of Geo. 
p. Brown, deceased, of Ijiurel 

county. . 

To James P. Burton, of Pulaski county 
To James Buchanun, of Pulaski county 
To Minerva Bow. widow of Jess© A; 


12 22 

100 00 

SO 00 
110 Ud 
100 00 


135 00 
TO 00 

:to oo 


125 00 
5 00 
100 00 


Bow, deceased, 
county. 


of Cumberland 


75 00 


To Ja*. M. Bryant, of Jefferson county 1,060 00 
To James Boon, oi Nelson county. 150 00 

To James E. Blackburn, administrator 
of Lewis Blackburn, deceased, of 

Caldwell county . 

ToJamaa M- Bricken. administrator o' 

Thomas J. Bi token, deceased, of Bus- 

sell county .... . 

To John Boyle, of McLean county.. 

To Aaron F. triglcr, of Boone county.. 

To R. 0. Cole, of Cumberland county. 

To Thomas P. Cardwell, of owaley 

county... 

To Win- Cooper, of Marion coumv. 

To Catharine Cronin, administratrix of 
Michael Crouin, deceased, or Jeffer¬ 
son county. ......•• 

To Jam** J. Clark, of Spencer county 
To Martin H. Coyl. or Bov leoouniy.. 

To Win. Caskey, of Morgan county ... 

To Richard Hamilton and L. A. Flamil 
ton. administrators of Geo. 8. Con¬ 
nor, deceased, of Washington county 
To J. H. Carpenter, of Bourbon county 
To Jas. D. Cook, or Fayette couuty 
To Wiloy J. Coffey, of Magoffin county 
To ValonUuo Cntvcns,of Russell county 
To Edmon Chapman, of Russell countv 
To Russell G- Cole, of Cumberland 

county., .. 

To K. l>. Covington, adunulistraior «if 
Isaac C. Covington, deceased, of 

Warren county. .. 

To Jus. T. CbUm. of Monroe county. 

To Willi* and Jus. K. Downing, execu¬ 
tors of Wm. Downing, decked, of 

l ayette county . 

To J. A. Dow ell, of Allen county 
To Jx*. Boughtv. of Laurel county 
To J. D. Elliott, administrator ot Cas¬ 
sandra Doom, deceased, of Neljon 


115 00 


00 00 
73 04 
2:10 0 U 

30 eo 

100 00 
502 50 


52 50 
90 00 
80 00 
30 00 


5 25 
130 00 
16 00 
100 00 
2d 00 
110 00 

01 40 


620 00 
103 50 


12 00 

150 00 
10 00 


county. 

To Benjamin F. Dunn, of Boyle county. 

To John Bw mg. of .Marion county 
To H. L. Ead». truster, for the Society 
of Shaker*, of Logan comity .... 

To Elijah Ewing, of Marion county ... 

To Joseph Ely. of Harlan couuty 
To Jam -s H Ead®->. administrator of 
N itb tiiiel Eude>, deceased, of Muh- 

leoburgh couuia-... 

To Ikobert Finn, of Slmp.von county 
To Thomas Milfar, administrator o? 
Kiiziteth Foreman, deceased, of 

Spencer county .. 

To Olin J. Farnsworth, of Hopkins 

county.. 

To F.ltj in Folev. of Bussell county .. 

To R. B. Ward, executor of Richard 
p. Gre-thane deceased, ot Kockca*tle 

county . . 

To kutn 8. Garrison, Mark T. Ferris 
and William U. Garrison. administra¬ 
trix an J administrators of Tnomas L. 
Garris mi. deceased, of Montgomery 

couuty . 

To Elizabeth Hornbaek. of Larue 

county.. • - • 

To Pleasant M. Honaker, of Butler 

county . • 

To T. F. Hieronymus. of OwM»*y 

county. • 

To. i^iw,sA. Howard, of Knoxcounty. 

To Cu h jilvt'll R. Holbrook, of Gwslry 

county ... r . . 

ToP. M Hpr.aker. of Butter couny 
To wilimm T. Utittun. of Auilersou 

county .. 

To A U. Horn, of Grayson county 
To Howard W Hinds, of EstiU county. 

To W iniuiu Her! on. of Laurel county.. 

To George (or George W.) HouncbeU, 

of Clay county . 

To John Hood of Elliott county — 

To L W. Elmore, uduiimstiator of L. 

HarUleLl, deceased. of Green county. 

To Bennett Hinton, o. Allen county. 

To David Henry, of Morgan county — 

To .lame* Marcum, administrator of 
Levi Hensley, decease.!, of Clay 

countv. . 

To JesMt W. Heath, of Pulaski • ounty. 

To Woodaon V. Johnson of Allen 

couuty.. “.. 

To Alien Jones, of Pulaski county. 

To Thos. John*.ou. of Bourbon county 
ToK.nc L. Janes ^or Jaffiesj, of Wash¬ 
ington couuty ... 

To K S. Kuowlc*. of Warren county, 

$•: 11: ami to tlm estate of J. B. Car¬ 
ter. of Warren county. $2 11: in all 
To Marv C Bragg, administratrix of 
Win. H. Kiri Icy, decuaseu. of Rock¬ 
castle county... 

To Simoon IL Lewis, of Jefferson county. 

To Kdtmuid Lucas, of Wanva county .. 

To Britain Lee, ot Bell comity .. -- 

To Wm. Laws, of Knox county... 

To John Lewis, of Pulaskicounty ... 
To Henry L&mbntb. of Simpson county 
To John L. Lupsley. of Russell county. 

To Robi-itL. Laugston, administrator 
of Robert Langston, deceased, of 

Bourbon country . , 

To Elias Means or Meersi. of Larue 

county. .. 4 . .. - 

To Cl aries J. Murphy, of Cumberland 

county.. • - — 

To Charles R. Myers, of Montgomery 

county ... 

To James L. May. of Magoffin county .. 
To - athcrloe \. MePhei>>hn,ndmifinitra- 
t ix of Win McPherson, dt*ee«tsed. of 

Lucan county .. 

To Wm. T- Wdhamson, administrator 
of Spencer Morgau. deceased, of 

Christian county... 

To Mary Moore, of Bell county . __ 

To Raj Mot*, of Jessiandue county .. 
To Jonathan McNeil, administrator of 
Geo W. Miller, deceased, of Laurel 

ounty .... . 

To John U. Montgomery, of Green 

county .. . 

To Henry' Noland, of iiwsley county .. 
To Eh/ikbeiu Newcomb, of Marion 

county . 

To E. K. McKay, administrator of Jos. 

>1 Nicholls, deceased, of Nelson 

county...... . 

To Jas. B. Otter, of Warren county 
To Mary O’Hair tor O’ilin. of Wolfe 
county 

To Smith Overby (or Overly), of Laurel 
couuty 

To Jot.ii Pitman, of Laurel county — 
To Shelton Pointer, of Rq^-scasile 

county.. 

To John 31. Park, of F-stlll county. .. 
To Ben. Hardaway, administrator of 
Enos IVarmau, deceased, of Hardin 

county. 

To» uthiTine Parsley, widow of Ah*x- 
nn-l r Pawley, deceased, of Laurel 
■ ■ 

To Joan W. Pash. Jr.. admmEtiator of 
J nn W. Paili, deceased, of Nelson 

county. 

To Wm. Ritchie, of Nelson county ... 
ToOtha A. ltejri olds, of Fayette county 
To Webber H. R»*ed. of 1 ee ciunty 
To Albion ii. Robinson, of Uu^sea 

county.,... . 

To Ai/ud Redd color«d,'. of Rockcastle 
county. $10: and to lienry Redd icol¬ 
or ini .ot Rockcastle county, §10. in all. 
To James A Rouse.of Spencer county, 
$-VJ: and to M m T. Rouse, of 8p«n- 

cer count) . $50: in all . 

To John A Rexroat, of Ru^ell county. 
To James M. Bmitb, of Cumberland 

county.. . — ... 

To Gilbert Saylor. udiflttiiHUatorof l^vl 
bavlor, dei-easod.of Harlan county . 
T«» Wilsou B. Savior, of Harlan county. 
To Mrs. P. J. $mi:h. admlniMrati lx «*f 
Th.n., J. Smith, deceas'd, of Rock- 
castle county.. . 

To Jane Shadowcn. tritlOn of Wru. 
Shodowen. deceased, of Pulaski ooun- 

to 

To Mary L Steele (formerly Mary L. 

Pllklngtoin. of Frt.iklin county 
To Goo. Simptioti. of si'cnci-r county.. 
ToJohuL. and Shlnev i . Spears, ex- 
efutornof Gen c*. Spears, deceased, 

of Boyle count) . ... 

To A A. Strange, of Cun-berlund 

couuty.* . 

To A B Spark*. Mrs I N Shackel¬ 
ford. Mr<i M. F. snacketfurd, hu-an 
A. Light. W. K. Sparks. S. A Differ- 
Min and M. T. spu k«. only children 
an t i elrs-nt Ua ot Wm. sjiarks. ».*f 

t allow ay county. . . 

To Jack l' Turner, of Knox county ... 
To W. L. To«u*rnJ. of Logen csnmty.. 
To. J. H. Campbell. a4lmmu-trutor of 
Mrs PhJladilpUla Taylor, deceased, 
of Lc^giut county 

To Ann E, Turner, ndminis'iatrix of 
Jamc* A. Turner. deceaseJ, of Mont¬ 
gomery couuty. . 

To M. L. Tmty, of Hickman count ... 
To Stephen H. Tate, of Pulaski county. 
To Alexander K. Victor, executor, and 
Marla C. Victor, executrix of Warde r 
Victor, deceased, of Bourbon county. 
To W. W. Wright, of Warren county 
To John A. lUoo, adudrdMtrator of 
• Benj. D. Wilson, deceased, of Simp- 
»oa county. 


250 fO 
125 00 

16 00 

103 20 
JUS 00 
25U U0 


) 4 

<10 

30 

18 

15 

UO 

2* 

00 

25 

00 

03 

r,o 

100 

•V> 

28 

i<6 

13 

80 

200 

60 


135 00 
120 U0 


415 00 


140 00 
40 00 


753 28 

77 12 

73 28 

55 00 

100 00 
560 OO 

115 00 
100 00 

115 00 
325 00 
120 00 
50 00 

100 00 

74 00 

100 00 
300 00 
9 85 


44 50 
04 20 

150 00 
14 75 
250 00 

U 00 


181 56 
120 00 
150 00 
120 UJ 
40 00 
54 »V» 
110 »K) 
7 50 


300 00 

110 00 

100 00 

47 00 
100 00 

140 00 


150 00 
120 Od 
340 00 


235 50 


ICO 25 
100 00 


24 37 


805 00 
110 00 


84 00 


100 00 

027 *27 


100 00 
120 00 


no oo 


17 60 


48 00 
31 41 

420 00 
37 50 

24 00 


20 OO 


100 00 
GO 00 

110 00 

l230 00 

100 00 


125 00’ 


60 00 
50 00 


102 06 
00 00 


50 00 
240 00 
120 00 


269 00 


200 00 
125 OO 
32 00 


130 00 

37 50 


100 20 


To iohn Walsh, of Morgan county 
To W. O. Wode, nt Sirnnsiin county 
To ( ha*». E, Wilson, of Nelson county.. 

Tu Henry T. Motley. admini*traior of 
Aaron A. Willoughby^ d cCv a i ied, «>f 

Allen county . . • 

To Jame% Wlit. of Allen county 
To Madison Keeum, administrator t>r 
Joshua Wilson, deceased, oi Magoffin 

county . . 

To John B Walton, of Simpson county. 

To V»tus Wellington/ of NVis m county. 

To N. J. Wellington of Nelson county. . 

To J. U Wallis, o f Fayette coun ty . 

COKORKSS. 

THE WORK LAID OFF FOR THE PRESENT 
WEEK IN THE HOVSE—THK SENATE PRO¬ 
GRAMME. 

Washington, March 9f—In tb© Houw to¬ 
morrow Mr. Morrison intends to roport front 
the Ways and Means Committee the tariff 
bill agreed upon by the majority, and the 
members of the Appropriation Commir.ee 
expect to report the Indian Appropriation 
Bill. The measure for the retirement and 
recoinnge of tho trade dollar has been made 
the special order for Tuesday, and the Com¬ 
mittee on Pacific Railroads ban leava td 
call up from the calendar Wednesday 
any bill* that may then have been perfected 
by the committee relating to the Thurman 
Sinking Fund Act or to tho amounts due 
from the Pacific railroads for surveying and 
patenting lands. The committee expect* to 
complete to-morrow the bill on the former 
subject. The bill to remove certain burdens 
on tbe American merchant marine and to 
encourage the American foreign carrying 
trade has been made tho special order for 
Thursday. Ail special orders aro liable, 
however, to be pushed aside by tbe regular 
annual appropriation bills or reveuue meas¬ 
ure*. 

The first special order for tbe week in the 
Senate is Tuesday, when tho Ilomie bill to 
regulate practice in patent suits is entitled 
to consideration. The Fitz John Poi tor Bill 
anil tbe bill to aid in tho establiabiiiLMit and 
temporary support of common schools are 
J>otb made special orders for noxt, Wodn* 1 *- 
day. The first-named measure wdl 
encounter strong opposition from Gen. 
Logan and other Republican Genntor*. 
but the prevalent impre>*uon is thnt it will 
pass. Tne Educational Bill will give rise to 
considerable dLcusdon, It- is possible that 
one or more of the special order* will he set 
aside to giving place temporarily to the 
Mexican treaty, which will he taken un 
Monday, and the consideration ot^ which ft 
is intended shall continue until a final decis¬ 
ion is reached._ 

THK POSTAL CARO. 

AN UNEXPECTED DECREASE IN THE NUMBER 
OF Cj&DK ISSUED SINCE THK INTRODUCTION 
OF TWO-CUNT LETTER POSTAGE. 

Washington, March 9.—bince the intro¬ 
duction of two-cent letter poslugo there lm» 
beeu an unexpected reduction in the number 
of postal cards issued. Fbr five years tbe 
average annual increase in th,e issue has 
been 14 percent. Kince July 1 last there 
has beeu an incroaso of 18 per ceut. in ad¬ 
hesive stamps and 25 per cent, in tho 
stamped envelopes issued. During these 
eight months the issue of postal card* has 
only reached 256,552.750, as against 260,- 
226,250 for the corresponding period the 
preceding year. In couM*quenco of the de¬ 
creased demand lor postal card*, the Post¬ 
master General iia» sent a letter to toe 
Speaker of the House informing him that the 
estimates for the coat of manufacturing 
cards the next fiscal ^ ear may be reduced 
$35,000._ 

BASE-BALL -QUARRELS. 

What Chairman Mills Has to 8 k ’.y in Reply to 
a Letter Written by William 
W. White. 


REFUSES TO SURRENDER- 


Osmau Dogna Still Holding* Out 
Against the English,Who Will 
Attack Him On Tuesday. 


Legitimist Circle* In France Excited 
Over An Attempt to Assassi¬ 
nate the Comte De Paris. 


Burial at Cork, With Imposing Ceremo¬ 
nies, of Jevome J. Collins and 
His Mother. 


The Czar and Emperor William to Meet 
in June—Canada’s GovernorGen- 
eral Threatened* 


GENERAL FOREIGN NEWS- 


SHORT-STOP NOTES. 


J Special to the Courier-Journal.] 

New York. March 9.—-1 saw Cenrley Ful¬ 
mer yeeurday and bad along talk with him. 

In tho eud, ho U,ld me i might say for hiru 
that he would, so far as he now knows, be 
ou hand in Cincinnati April 15 to play with 
tbe Cincinnati team. There L> in Philadelphia 
an organized effort to keep him away from 
Cincinnati, and every effort known to the 
ingenious was used to deprive tho Cincinnati 
team of his services. His wife and parents, 
however, urge him to go out and play hail, 
and he has about made up l;:i mind to do it. 
He will be in Cincinnati next WeduesJuy un 

bUSIUtfSS. 

Tne New York Club have engaged Copt. 
Prince, of the Seveuih R<*gimeui, to aimu .« 
tbe Now York team lor lhS4. Capt. Prince 
coiues of a prominent family here and his 
management of the New York Club will 
give it great prestige. 

Last Wednesday Secretary William Warn¬ 
ing White entnts out iu an alleged answer to 
Chairman Mills* letter. The answer wus as 
full of false statements and evasive sophis¬ 
tries as a dog is full of hairs. In a short but 
forcible reply Mr. Mills has shown up this 
man's shallow and deceptive efforts at rea¬ 
soning. Mr. Mills’ reply is addressed to the, 
Washington Her did and is worthy of gen¬ 
eral publication. If published in Washing¬ 
ton it will appear there today. The follow¬ 
ing is a copy: 

To Tne Base Ball Editoh or thk Warhinotox 
Sunday lixn.vLO. Washington —Ucm Sir: Your 
last issue contains what p irport* to be .» reply to 
my letter. In which I pr^ei;t«l o umm.- w > the 
Leo* io does not respect certain alleged contracts. 

1 exposed the hypocrisy of tne Union A*»«*cla- 
tinn * opposition to the re«rrve rule, and pointed 
out. i hi fulse and fraudulent character of Secreta¬ 
ry White*# pronuncl.imentoac* f*c -rn»ng players’ 
contract#. Mr. While doc# unt ntU a n.pt to reply 
to any of the**» ••htir^e-* He d<*es «eek to justify 
tho Union Association In attempting to bribe 
players away from the League clubs, by ci Ing 
an alleged precedent furnished by tho Chicago 
club before the League was organized, ann year# 
hi foro the national agreement was* create J. Ho 
admits that the ‘•Union" scheme U c mere finan¬ 
cial speculation and Invite® your renders t<» bell-ve 
that tho regular associations have no higher nun. 
Hr allege# that the League beguiled tlie Ameri¬ 
can Association Into an agreement which deliv¬ 
ered tin* said association info its clutches: also 
that such agreement was gotten up By the I>eaguo 
to emsh tJte Union Association: nl^> that tbe 
Ki-iof it Kt.ml the parties to it pledge them 
solve* not to put a club in uny League city. 

The facta nrr, that neither tho American Asso¬ 
ciation nor the ljcagtio should do crrdiD-d with 
ongiuAtiug the idea from wuiedi that, now fatuous 
ngreeuiciit sprung. Thut idea emanated from 
our thriving young ally, the Northwestern 
League. The American Association entered the 
conference voluntarily, as did the League. The 
a gr ee me nt was made months before the Union 
Association was proposed, nnd it contained no 
provision- whatever debarring unv association 
irom placing any number of clubs in an? League 
l it?. The wise provision to protect e>taUlUiied 
club# from ruinous competition, which has since 
b* i*o tru orpor.iled into that agreement, uus 
added, after th* cln^j of l »st Msason, at the in¬ 
stance of the American Association’# delegation 
to un* Arbitration Committee tiierero.pnsDllcted 
Uv a tiunuiinou# vote of ttmt Asaoclation. 

Your many readers, who will soon throng tho 
tieauurnl grounds of your promising American 
Association t lub, wUl ne<*d no mentor to point 
out to them the utter fa tel tv ntn! a> surdity of the 
charges of imbecility which White hails at Hid 
American Association. Mr. White, finding him¬ 
self beaten on nil other point**, seeks to enlist 
Hympatby for th*.- Union Assodalluti bv the ab¬ 
surd churge that the le ague got up the National 
agreement tocrushlt bccatiM* of its twenty-fivo 
cents ndmiAsion tariff: and vet he charge# that 
we arc using every effort to Induce other associa¬ 
tions to enter the National agreement, although 
it is well known thut many of them have a simi¬ 
lar tariff. Ot coumv the National agreement does 
not attempt to regulate tue admission tariff. 
Whether its clube charge ten cent* or £10 i- a 
matter for each associate u to regulate Perhaps 
the former figure would be a hlgn tariff fur tuc 
Union Association: but does anybody f ipnosr tho 
League would be less hoetilc to it should it adopt 
the Jailerl* 

There is not a single paragraph in Mr. White’s 
letter which doo* not contain a gn>ai perversion 
*.f facts. But this meudavbiua mouthpiece of 
the Union Association fan ly overleap.** himself in 
his flagrant distortion of the Fort Wayne case, 
for he cun not fail to Know that the charges of 
non-payment t» plater*, preferred affuinst the 
Fort Wayne club, were fuliy investigated by the 
Board of Directors of the Northwestern League, 
a body of gentlemen of irreproachable chuiae- 
teraud exceptional ahliit?, and who. after tit-.mg 
the testimony of the ph*yen» iu iK»rson. fuliv and 
unanimously acquittrii and exoaeratcd lhu Fort 
Wayne club from every iota • t such c)iarjp*s. 
Mr. While read- the newnpaiiprs, and he can not 
well avoid knowing that tile Mirror of American 
Spuria, and other newspaper*, which had been led 
bv tbe players’ charges tocrit1rl.se tbe Fort Wayne 
Club* promptly nml iiui|imiine«liy e*iiunemi«»d 
that chib on the conclusion of such trial. A 
cause that ueeds boUpTing up by lying, treach¬ 
ery and tlitwcry must U-on a good foundation, 
surely. Yours truly, a. G. Mills. 

Mr. MilU has also written to the Princeton 
College Club in reply to a question from 
them a# to whether they would be allowed to 
play Union Club* ami other clubs under tbe 
National agreement, lit- reply w*t in the 
negative, and tbe Princeton nine will cancel 
their date with tbe Washington Union Club, 


London, March 9.—A Suakim dispatch 
says: Osman Digtna refuse.* to surrender to 
Uen. Graham, and is determined to fight. 
Ilo has two cannon and 1,009 rifles. 

A Cairo dh>patch says: NuGnr Pasha, 
Prime Minister, has temporarily assumed 
the direction of the Ministry of tho Interior 
in place of Sabet Pasha, who resigued in 
consequence of a dispute with Clifford Lloyd, 
Undersecretary, The latter virtually con¬ 
trols the department. 

Geu. Graham telegraphs that he will begin 
bis inarch against Osman Diuma Tuesday nt 
daybreak. He hasulready pushed hi* cavalry 
forward on llaudorf. Muny Arab desert¬ 
ers from Tamauteb are arriving at Suakim. 
They report that Ostuan’s forces are breaking 
up, tho tribes being unwilling to fight. Eng¬ 
lish scouts report the country clear ns far as 
Tmimuieb.* Osman Digma is massing all 
those remaining faithful to him at iMiikat, 
where he will oinks a final stand. Gen. Gra¬ 
ham’s orders are to make Tama me b the limit 
ot bts advance. Gen. Stephenson urg</s the 
Government to consent to the pursuit of Os¬ 
man to tJiuknt. Sir Evelyn Luring opposes* 
tho advance farther t han lumameD. 

Geu. Gordon has sent u letter to Banng 
urging that a corps of 2,000 men recruited 
from the Gbuorkns, Sihks. and other Moderns 
of ludin be sent to Ebartourn to furm the 
nucleus ot tho Soudanese army. 

A Suakim dispatch says: The Black 
Watch” regiment advanced eight miles t*>- 
dav and enentnped in,front of ttie enemy s 
li e*. It is estimated that Osmau Digma en¬ 
rolled 6,000 men at Sinkat. A . 

A Constantinople dispatch say* that Ghazt 
Osman Pasha, Turkish Minister of N\ ar, ha# 
forbidden, under the severest penalties, tbe 
enlistmont of Alhauian* fur service against 
ElMaUdi. Earl GranviUe, Bnu*b Foreign 
•Secretary, has replied to the Porte scoinmu 
mention lit ivgivnl to Turkish intervention in 
Egypt. He s»v# tho Porte has unused its op- 
poituuitv. that tbo Egyptians are more oj>- 
posed to the Turks titan to Uio Eugii h, that 
the exchange of views on lue subject must be 
postponed until the honor of the British arms 
has been vindicated and order restored, and 
♦hut England recogmziss tho sovereign right# 
of the Sultan. 

A to.eg ram from Gen. Gordon aunounces 
Uiat he G unable to extricate the garrison# 
.on the White Nile ami Blue Nile without 
irooi #. 

The survivors of the Sinkut butchery have 
arrived at Suakim. Tuey report that the 
r*boU toie tuo boly of lewtik Bey into 
piece?, and devoured his liver, in accordance 
with their superstition. 

FRANCE. 

A PLOT TO A88AKSINATETUE COMTE DX PARIS 
MfaCAHIlHrS^-A DVNaMIHC OUTRAGE AT 

LYONS. j 

Paris, March 9.—Legitimist circles aro 
excited over a reported plot to assassinate 
the Comte do Paris. A packago handed in 
at tho railway parcel office at Lyons. Fri¬ 
day. and addressed, “Couito tie Paris, at 
bis hotel, Tlue Yareuue, Paris,” wus found, 
on examination, to contain an iu- 
ferunl machine. The package was 
obloug, twelve inches Ions tt * 1 ^ twelve 
inches wide. The official# w ere led to exam¬ 
ine it by finding the wrapping became un¬ 
done. They found in it a flat metal 
box containing a clock movonieut and a 
quantity of dynamite. The Comte was ab¬ 
sent from hi* Paris residence, havuig gone 
to Cannes. Had the package reached its des¬ 
tination and exploded tue domestics would 
nave been the sufferer*. 

A dynamite cartridge was exploded in tbe 
Custom-house at Lyons to-day, aiding an of¬ 
ficial. 

The anarchists maintain strict secrecy con¬ 
cerning their preparations for a monster 
gathering. It is believed the 1Mb mst. is 
the date fixed for tbe diom meeting. 

The French share-holders of the Suez 
Canal Company protest against tbe conven¬ 
tion of De Lvsseps an*I the English ship¬ 
owner*. Do L*#seps threatens to consider 
the probable rejection of t « convention a- a 
vote of cemure upon hi# policy and to with¬ 
draw from the management of th** canal. 

A circular issued from the Ministry of tho 
Interior asks the Prefects privately to ad¬ 
vise tho Government whether there exists 
within their respective Department# a propa 
gamin in favor of the Compte De Peris. Tbo 
circular contain* a list of questions requiring 
trice?o ca t^gorlcal answers and i# raken a# an indica- 
. v*rw** t | on 0 f tb* design of the Government to ex¬ 
pel the Count from France on the very earli¬ 
est pretext. The Monarchical journal# are 
verv angry at the movement, while the Re¬ 
publican newspapers give it their hearty 
approval. _ 


menagerie were bring removed from tho 
tram at tho depot of a town in Kent, two 
ciepti.in'.-, altmucd nt the wa;#tling 
of th»* engines, broke loose and 
cnrei red wridiy through iho #triK*t#, 
br»*nkiiig the massive gates uf the depot ami 
attacking three pencil*, two of whom were 
seriou*ly injured. ‘I’ney filially entered the 
Col de Fnc aud made their wav iotu a hon*e, 
the fiuormg of which gave way, and the Ani¬ 
mal* ware precipitated into Lhc ce lar, from 
w bich, after uu hour’s work, they wero 
drawn by other ul •pliant*. Tue wiMest ex- 
citemeut provaiied upon the streets. 

GERM AN V. 

A CONFERENCE BLCTWKKV r UrEIU'R WILLIAM 
AND 1 IIK CZ A it ARKANGLD FUR JUNE. 

Berlin. March 9.—A meeting between 
the Czar of Russia and the Emperor of Ger¬ 
many i* arranged for June at DaruuLidt. 
The Czxrgoesto attend the marriage of tuo 
Grand Duke tiergius to the Princess Eliza¬ 
beth, of Hesse. Tbe confarencu will lake place 
after the marriage ceremony. The presence 
of the Emperor of Austro-liungarv has not 
been decided on. Bismarck, Degiers, Rus¬ 
sian Foreign Minister, and Prince Orleff, 
Russian Euibas»ador to Berlin, accompany 
their respective sovereigns. '1 ue meeting 
will resuit in a great diplomatic conference. 

An Antwerp dispatch say»thut Gen. David, 
coiuinauUer-in chief of the civic guards, arid 
a broker uuuiod \\ iliums fought a duel with 
sward#. Willems was wbuoded. 

Thu four German Jews, acquitted at Konitz 
of the charge of betting fire to the synugoguu 
at Nuu*teilin, bnve beuu severely maltreate^l 
by the populace of the latter place. One of 
tiiem ua.* nearly killed by a umb. A ma¬ 
jority of the Jewish shops and houses in 
Ncustellin were destroyed. The polica were 
pOWerhwt to prevent tuo outrages. 

Much atteuiion is attracted iu political cir¬ 
cles to the article In the Cologne Gazette 
denouncing Kickert's altitude in the Reich¬ 
stag. The Gazette nays that even Ameri¬ 
cans are recognizing that Bismarck was jus¬ 
tified m refusing to forward the Lasxer reso¬ 
lution to the Reichstag. 

The North German Gazette, quoting an 
extract from a letter Irom an impartial New 
York correspondem, in which the latter says 
tho Laskvr incident and pork questtou are by 
an accidental combination of party inter¬ 
ests used to furiher political objects and a 
crusade against foreign encroachment, de¬ 
clare* the Progre>sist# aud Seces-muist* will 
be auswcrable lor any biiterness between 
America and Germany. 

It instated that the reason the Free Con¬ 
servatives and members of the Center party 
refrained from joining tne Conservatives in 
opposition to Rickert b expression of tbuuk* 
in the name ot Lasker’s friends fur the many 
tokens of sympathy received, was tuat they 
considered the American resolution in honor 
of a Gerumu Deputy an act of reverence. 

Tho Ncnrth German Gazette, in another 
article, say# that Rickert seued the oppor¬ 
tunity at the first sitting ot the Reichstag 
to encroach upon the constitutional preroga¬ 
tives of the Euiporor as regards a foreign 
policy w a nmnuer derogatory to tho au¬ 
thority of the Fi&mJent, and attempted to 
pave the way lor a direct conLract beeweon 
the Reichstag and American House of Rep¬ 
resentatives. 

THE DOM/NION. 

THE FENIAN BROTHERHOOD SAID TO HAVE 
KENT iHiiEATKMNU LETTERS 10 THE GOV¬ 
ERNOR GENERAL. 

Ottawa, March 9 .—A rumor is current 
that tbo Governor General has received 
threatening letter# from the Fenian Brother¬ 
hood in Chicago. The guard at ILdeau Hail 
is doubled. 

Charles Campbell, of Nova Scotia, a mem¬ 
ber of Parliament, while under tbe influence 
of liquor, made a savage assault upou David 
Mills, engaged at the time w itb correspond¬ 
ence in the Commons chamber. He endeav¬ 
ored to strike Mills with a stick, but was pre¬ 
vented by members present. 

A Quebec dispatch says another miow- 
6torm has again caused a railway blockade. 

A Hamilton, Ont , di-patch says the men 
in McPherson & Co.’#, wholesale boot# aud 
shoes, support the striking females against 
the new scale of wages. Uno hundred aud 
tweuty are locked out. 

FOREIGN NOTES. 


ARTHUR’S ANTAGONISTS. 


Senator Miller, Collector Robertson, 
Whitelaw Reid, George William 
Curiis, and Oilier Prominent 


| 


IRELAND. 

BURIAL AT CORK OF THE REMAINS OF JE¬ 
ROME J. COLLINS AND HIS MOTHER. 

Cork, March 0.—Tho bodies of Jerome J. 
Collin# and mother were reroovld this morn¬ 
ing from their temporary resting place to 
Queenstown Cathedral. After hi^b mas# a 
procession, headed by a bra&i band playing 
a Dead March in Saul, and comprising 
tbe Amalgamated Trades, Guild#, 
Town Commissioner and about five 
thousand citizens, escorted tbo remains 
through tho principal airteto to tho Admiral 
ty pier, whero they wore placed on tbe 
steamer Erin, nccompamed by tho Mayor 
m.d corporation of Cork and tbo immediato 
friends of tho deceased. Tho river pro¬ 
cession then started for Cork, tho Erin load¬ 
ing, followed by steamers crowded with 
citizen#, the British Admiral’# pinnace, 
man-of-war und tender with blue jackets 
and a custom# launch, upon which was 
Platt. American Consul at Cork. Ail 
the vc»cls in tho procession had 
their flags at half-mast, as did also tbe ship- 
pi- g iu the harbor. On reaching Cork, in 
spite of the inclemency of tho weather, an 
immense precession was formed, const-ting 
of the town corporation, various literary 
societies, student* of tho Queon’s College, 
Catholic clergymen, merchants and trades¬ 
men, also John and William Redmond, mem¬ 
bers of Parliament, and Michael Davitt 
Tbe cortege wendod its way to Curragh 
Cuppaine, a mil© from town, where tho 
bodies were interred. 


GREAT BRITAIN. 

THE QUEEN TO LEAVE FOR GERMANT THE 
IsT OF APRIL. 

London, March 9.—The Queen leaves 
England for Germany on tho 1st of April. 

Admiral Blb-Sidney Colpoys Daires is dead, 
aged 79. 

West jn finished his 5,000-mii* tramp this 
week. Ho was escorted from Corydon to 
the Victoria coffee palace by mounted Con 
stables amid great cheering. 

Thu te.-ttin^ on the Bubear-Ross sculling 
mutch to-morrow is now even. Bubear’s 
backers are eonfid" , nt of hi* success. 

Prince Henry, of Pnif&m, and the German 
Emba-s.idMr wero at the Paddington depot 
in a room directly above the cloak-room, in 
which tho dynamite was recently found, at 
tho exact, moment of tho explosion at the 
Victoria depot. 

While the animal* belonging to Banger s 


Pierola hns arrived at Lima. He was 
met by a large coucourse of Chilians, who 
urged tbo ratification or tbe treaty of peace. 

Tub Madrid ElProgrteo, organ of Senor 
Marios, has be^n coutikcated and the type 
seized on account of its violent and persisteut 
attacks upou Kiug Aliouso and the Govern¬ 
ment. 

Thc latest advices from Tonquin state 
that Gen. Millot, comma odor of tne French 
land forces, has advanced 15 kilometres in 
the direction of Bacuinb. Tho weather is 
favorable. 

The Pop* hns refusal to receive the 
Bavarian Prince Leopold and bis wife be¬ 
cause of the onamoious position of the Holy 
See and the ambiguous position thereby 
created for Catholic Prince# visiting Home. 

col7cash captured, 

While Hit Son Bogan Eludes the Officers Seek¬ 
ing to Arrest Him, And Escapes 
Into the Swamps. 

SOUTH CABOLINA'S GREAT SEN3ATI0H. 


Republicans Said to Re Working to 
IK feat Chester A.‘s Nomination 
for PresideuL 


Parke Godwin Purchases aControlling 
Interest in One of the Leading 
New York Papers* 


POLITICAL GOSSIP. 


fN/v-rial to the Courier-Journal.] 

New York. March 9.— Indications show 
that tbo Lime is near at hand when 
Senator Miller, Collector Robertsou, White- 
law Reid, George William Curtis and other 
representative Independent Republicans will 
openly autagonizu President Arthur iu New* 
York with a viow of defeating his nomina¬ 
tion. They will tako tho position that Ar¬ 
thur con uot carry eitfcer New York or Ohio, 
ana that, regardless of everything else, this 
is sufficient reason why the Republican party 
should nominate some one else. 

Senator Miller ha# been very quiet in his 
movements, but it is now fully understood 


temporary Chairman was .Samuel Woolner, 
of Peona; and temporary Secretary, Alfred 
T. Jones, of Philadelphia. The permanent 
offieors eieofced aro: President. Wariey 
Piuttzi-k. Now York; Vice President*—Isa¬ 
dora Lmih-rrann. New York; Louts Abra¬ 
ham, Washington. and Aaron Norden. Chi¬ 
cago; .Secretary* Alfred T. Jones; A*<i«.tai»t 
Secretary. L. Liesersobn, New York: Ser¬ 
geant-at-Arm#, Aaron Danby, Chicago. 

Ills 1UHEE ir/FAN. 

John liefer Arrmicd, Cherced with ilsiln: 
< omnnllted Uiueinv. 

Newark, O , March 9.—John G. Hafer, 
a middle-aged German, wijo for some time 
past hns been employed as a laborer in tho 
Daltimore and Ohio railroad yards hero, was 
arrested yesterday by Constable L. S. White 
on a warrant sworn out by Dennis Shaw, 
charging him with bigamy. Hnfer was mar¬ 
ried in this city about a 'month ago to Me- 
lis*a Gunion, who recently got hold of a 
Ic.ter written her husband by a woman 
in Indiana, who Signed h- r-elf as hi* 
wife. Further inquiry uncovered tho fact 
that still another wife of Hafer now lives in 
Bethlehem, Pa. 

This much-married man was arraigned be¬ 
fore Justice B. J. Wihon yesterday and 
pleaded guiltv of tbo charge of bigamy. The 
Justice bound him ovor to the Common 
Plea# Court in the sum of $500 to await the 
action of the grand jury. In default of bad 
Hafer was incarcerated. 


n 11: E h a res. 


Fran* 


Perk Htacinthe arrived at San 
cisco last night from Los Angeles. 

Freeman Willif, proprietor of tho 
Eaglo Hotel. Laeoniu. N. H., was probably 
fatally slabbed lost night by Fred Dow 
while drunk. 


The Duxbury-St. Pierre section of the 
that he is irrevocably committed against tbe Anglo-American cable, interrupted over 
President, it \v as altera conference with i thr *« month*, was repairer! yesterday by 


Charleston, S. C., March 9.— Under 
special instructions from Gov. Thompson, 
State Constable R. M. Itichbourg, with 12 
picked men uimod with Springfield rifles; 
left Columbia at midnight last night, and 
arrived at Florence ut 3;30 a. m. They 
were there met by Sheriff Cole, of Dar¬ 
lington, and took a special train for 
Cash’s Depot. Thu force reached a point a 
mile below Cash’s Depot at 5 a. m. , aud 
here tbo train stopped and the force 
disembarked and proceeded up the track ou 
foot to Cash’s hoUHO. Before da) light tbe 
house was surrouuded. About 6 o’clock Cash 
rose and saw the pickets, armed himself with 
a Winchester repeating nfle and pistols and 
triedXo escape from the premises. Heron 
against John II. Pearson, one of the senti- 
ueis, who prusunlod his rifle and demanding 
his surrender. Cash bodtated, and 
Pearson said, *‘Drop your gun 
or I’ll shoot, you in |two seconds,’* 
and Cash dropped his gun quickly, lie ad¬ 
mitted having been ta>.en completely by sur¬ 
prise. W heu »upturnd Ae was emleav nug 
to make his way to a log house where young 
Cadi had been sleeping every night tint e tho 
murder. Tbe foico closed iu and searched 
old Cash’s housu thoroughly, but could fiud 
nothing of Bogan Ca>h. 

The party then j-tnrted for the log house. 
When tuey wore half way there Cash, get- 
ting alurui.*d for tho safety of his sou, pro 
posed tu go to tho log housu alone, and 
pledged his honor that he would have bis sun 
surrender within two hours. The proposi¬ 
tion was accepted nnd the lore© recalled. 
Cash went, aud soon returned, saying his 
sou had left the h <use an bom 1 before nud 
ht* did not know where ho was. lie 

offered, however, if tho force would 
withdraw, that his son would sui render be¬ 
fore Wednesday, lie ftnted he only wanted 
to come off with living colors, that neitltor ho 
ho nur bis son desired to be cunsid- 
ered outlaws, but that he desired 
to effect a capitulation on bis 

own terms. Bearing in mind tho desire of 
Gov. Thompson that Ca*h should be captured 
rather than be allowed to surrender, Chief 
Const able Richbourg declined these term s. 

Cash’s homo was then surrounded bv a 
guard with instructions to allow no one to 
leave or enter. Cash’s pistol and rifle were 
takeu from him. Cash protested strongly 
urainst this, but said bo yielded to force. 
Capt. Richbourg, having determined to let 
nothing prevent a most thorough search for 
young Cash, left most of his men at the house, 
und at 0 o'clock proceeded to Cheraw 
to summon a larger puss' with which to ou¬ 
ter the swnmpand track tbo fugitive, nml at 
Cheraw about 30 additional n»tu. including 
a number of horsemen, were obtained, and 
these scoured the country around for miles 
durtug the evening but could find no trace of 
Roger Co»b. The search will bo resumed at 
daylight to-morrow, aud strong luqics nr* 
eiitcrtaluod that tho murderer uiTl be taken. 
Old Cash was taken to Columbia by to¬ 
night’s traiu, charged with complicity m bu 

soil's crime._ 

Hi*hop < ('ooiiltlun. 

Omaha, March 9.—Bishop Clarkson’s con¬ 
dition remains unchanged. No hopeful indi¬ 
cations have beeu developed m tbe lost 24 
hours. 


Miller and when he bad learned th% Seuu- 
tor’s views that Gov. Foster spoko out about 
Arthur’s weakness in Ohio. That uttcrauco 
is row understood to have been a feeler, tbe 
skirmish fire of a well arranged battle. 

Collector Robertoon has been equally reti¬ 
cent, but his relations with tbe Administra¬ 
tion havo not been cordial at any time. It 
is said, upon good authority, that after ho 
had recommended tho appointment of a man 
to be Chief Weigher at tho Custom-house, 
Secretary Folger refused either to confirm or 
reject the appointment, but asked that it bo 
withdrawn. This the Collector would 
not do, and for six 
the business of the Government was 
hampered by a deadlock. The President 
from his own experience as Collector finally 
recoguized that Robertson was right, and 
that the Administration could not sustain 
itself. Thtfu Mr. Folger yielded. The affair 
leiL bad blood. Collector Robertson, while 
refusing to talk to reporters, does not hesi¬ 
tate to sav for publication that be believes 
Mr. Blaine can carry New York. 

A Custom-bou<e * employe, speaking or 
Robertson reticent, said to-day: “He will 
speak out at the proper time We all recog¬ 
nize that Arthur has made a better Pretddent 
than would have been possible hud be kept 
up old associations, but it is a question of 
what is best for tbe Republican party. 
Arthur is our weakest man, nnd it would 
not do to nominate him. He could not 
curry New York or Ohio.” 

Iu the suine vein was the talk of 
Carroll E. Smith, editor or the Syra¬ 
cuse Journal , lost evening, when 
he said, “He must bo a roadman who talks 
about Arthur carrying New York. It would 
bo another Folger campaign.” 

The recent committee meeting was man¬ 
aged very carefully, with the intention of 
concealing difference* ovor Presidedtial can¬ 
didates. Mr. Arthur’s friends were not 
ready to disclose bis strength, and the oppo¬ 
sition was not ready to speak out, but a close 
canvass among the members as to the senti¬ 
ment in their localities indicated be\ond 
question that fully one-third of the New 
York duiegat js wUl bo opf>osed to Arthur. 
Blaine is the leading choice of the opposition, 
with Logan and Edmunds frequently men¬ 
tioned. 


PARKE GODWIN'S FURCHASE. 

THE CONTROLLING INTEREST IN THE NEW 

YORK COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER SAID TO 

BE HIS. 

\Svecml to the Courier-Journal. | 

New York, March 9.—Among the offors 
to Mrs. Hugh J. Hastings for tbe interest in 
the Commercial Advertiser is reported to be 
one from certain Democrats, among them 
Wm. C. Wbitnoy and Col. Oliver H. Payne, 
of Ohio. It has been known that tbe Payne 
people have wanted au organ in New York 
city for some time. Tbe amount offered in 
this instance was $225,000 for a controlling 
utoivst. There wa* manifest objections 
to letting tbe paper go for such 
a purpose, but the offer had the effect of 
raiding Parke Godwin’s bid from $125,000 
to $200,000. at which yesterday the trans¬ 
fer, so it is **aid, was agreed upon. Doubt 
remain* about the details of tbe transaction. 

There are throe son* of Mr. Hastings in 
the office, and they object to a surrender of 
the control. Parka Go.iwin said to-day 
that he did not wish to displace 
them, but only wanted a permanent berth 
for hi#son Harold, in whose behalf negotia¬ 
tions have been made. It is believed, how¬ 
ever, tnat a change in tbe paper's political 
leanings is conti tu plated. 

Payne’s followers already have the Sun as 
a frequent, though capricious, supporter. 
Apropos of talk of the old ticket, tue 'far, 
the Tammany organ, comes out to day say¬ 
ing that Tammany will swallow the conven¬ 
tion's nominees smilingly, tho old ticket not 
excepted. __ 

**<•»rn Mimitrn Ahead or Time. 

Chicago, March 9.—The first train of the 
new fast mail which left New York Batur- 
day night at 8:10 o'clock and was due at 
Chicago tbe next night at 12:35, arrived 
this evening seven minutes ahead of time. 
Postmaster General Gresham, First As¬ 
sistant Postmaster General Hatton and 
General Buperinicndent Thompson, of 
the railway mail service, accompanied 
the train. There were seven postal cars. 
G^n. Gresham stated to an Associated Press 
representative that ;tbe new service was in 
every way satisfactory, and that at no time 
was the train over seventeen minutes behind 
the schedule time. The trip was dovofil of 
special interest. 

Buffalo Brlefe. 

Buffalo, March 9.—The Masonic frater¬ 
nity ore agitated upon learning that the 
colored men of the city have seven lodges 
working under a charter issued by lienry 
Frederick, Duke of Cumberland, Sept. 28, 
J784, claimed as Grand Master of the 
Masons at that thne, and which was grant¬ 
ed to Prince Hall and other colored men. 

Loui* Buse, a i»aloon-keeper, w hen drunk, 
assaulted his wife. Being rebuked by his 
son, he discharged a rifle at him and hit his 
daughter iu the head. Tbe wound is not 
fatal. _ 

A £tnrm In the Emt. 

•New York, March 9.—Hail, rain, snow, 
thunder and lightning made up the weather 
hereabouts to-day. The icy sidewalks made 
walking full of peril. The tiw and tele¬ 
graph wires are heavily coated with ice. In 
Hartford, the heavy ice has broken down the 
\vir*s and even trees. Telegraphing is badly 
interrupted. Virginia had ife raid of had 
and thunder. The Appomatox is very high 
und rising rapidly. 

The 8ou(hi a ru Flood*. 

New Orleans, March 9.—The crevasse at 
Davis 1 plantation is increasing and the river 
is going through nearly eight feet deep. The 
Texas Pacific and Morgan’s railroads aro 
submerged. 

The cievasse was caused by the negligence 
of parties clo»ing up the old rice flume, and 
is so ba 1 that it is believed it can not Lie 
stopped for some time. 

A PrsirucflTe 8lorm. 

San Francisco, March 9.—Last night 
and to-day’s storm was tbo heaviest for 
many j ears. Santa Clara Valley for a dis¬ 
tance of eighteen miles is a vast lake. The 
damage to property is fully half a million. 
It is sUll rainin g._ 

Healu-r Nhrl liarnrH. 

Cleveland, O.. March 9.—The General 
Convention of the Jewish Order Kosher Stud 
iterseol met here to-day. nnd was called to 
order by Hen. Simon Wolf, of Washington, 

^** - - ITwAJftMelwn CANimlMHA Til A 


the company’s steamer, Mnna. 

Sixteen colored persons joined tho 
Ebenezer Baptist church. Pittsburgh, yes¬ 
terday , and wore immersed in tbe Monmiga- 
hola river. The weather was very cold and 
tho river running ice. 

I'mtrrnivf Wotnrn. 

Woman, lovely woman, established tbe 
flr*t daily paper In tho world in London, 
1702. Members of the fair sex have also 
fllietl the office of bank President with digni¬ 
ty and discretion. The Western States hu- 
mialiy present for respectful admiration the 
fragile, beautiful young girl, w ho unaided, 
snr© by a patient and bony tnulo, has plant¬ 
ed and cultivated a stupendous area of land, 
months eventually harvested the crops with 

celerity and vigor. The woman of to-day is 
ambitious. 8h» would invade the sacred in¬ 
terior of the pilot-house, and, wiring the 
spokes with firm grasp, guide the wayward 
Histiissipni stcamtioat in its tortuous path. 
8he would also lie a conductor on the horse 
cars, and yearns for a similar position on 
steam road*. It must be confessed that for 
tbu last named occupation she possesses ad¬ 
vantages which should not be ignored. She 
is not color blind, while the male of the 
species is notoriously verv much &o. 

Barbrd Wire i'uni|iaulni lo t'aimolldefr. 

Z$t. Louis, March 9.—It is given out as 
one of the results of tbe recent meeting here 
of barbed wire makers that steps were 
taken for tbe practical consolidation of all 
the barbed wire manufacturers in the coun¬ 
try, under the name of the National Barbed 
Wire Company Another meeting will be 
held in a couple of weeks, at which the final 
arraogeniciiig for tbe amalgamation and or¬ 
ganization of the new company will possibly 
be made. Tho cause of the advance of one 
cent per pound on tbe price of wire, made at 
the late meeting, is said to be tbe great de¬ 
mand for wire and tbe recent rise of from 
$5 to $S per ton on tbe cost of tho raw ma¬ 
terial. 

The Crcrh*’ >r» Chief. 

ISnrcial to the Couner-Journall 

Little Rock. Ark., March 9.— An Indian 
Territory special that Hou. J. M. Parryman, 
to whom tho position of principal Chief of 
tho Creek Nation was awarded by Secretary 
Teller, has taken possession of tho office and 
is doiug nil in his power to prevent further 
trouble. Tho frivnds of Speicbee are await¬ 
ing hU arrival before making any move¬ 
ment. Speicbee is in Washington as a dele¬ 
gate from the Creek Nation, but is expected 
home within a few days. The adherents of 
Speicbee and Checota bave a majority in 
both branches of the Creek Legislature. 


In Mrmorv of tiarlbaldl. 

Stapleton. S. I., March 9.—Largo depu¬ 
tations of Italians Irom New York city this 
afternoon visited the cottage whore Gari¬ 
baldi lived at Clifton, S. I, and placed over 
the door a white marble tablet inscribed in 
Italian, “Here lived in exile from 1851 to 
1853. the hero of two worlds, Guiscppe Gar¬ 
ibaldi. Dedicated by some friends.” Ales¬ 
sandro Oldrini, compatriot of Garibaldi, de¬ 
livered a eulogy. Speeches were made by 
G. F. Seccbi de Cassoli. editor of L'echo de 
Ratio, and Luigi Brotalfl, sculptor of tho 
bust ut Garibaldi placed on the island of Ca- 
prora. After a banquet tbe party roturned 
to New York. 

A Mob After a Murderer. 

Chicago, March 8.—The Daily News 
Lincoln, Illinois, special says: The Sheriff re¬ 
ceived a telephone message last night that a 
mob had formed at Chestnut for the purpose* 
of coming here and lynching a man in jail 
charged with a triple murder, near Mt. Pu¬ 
laski, about a year ago.|Tbe Sheriff removed 
the prisoner from the jail and secreted him 
in a private house under guard all night. 
The mob learning that the Sheriff bnd been 
warned cut the telephone wire and dispersed. 
It is rumored they ure coming to-nfabt. Tne 
Sheriff la preparing to guard the prLouer. 

Preliminary Bsemliiatliins. 

Columbus, O., March 9.—The case of tbe 
State against R*»v. B. M. O’Boy lsn con¬ 
tinued to a late hour at New Lexington last 
night nnd weut over to Monday. It is ex¬ 
pected to complete tbe preliminary bearing 
by to-morrow noon. 

The preliminary examination of the parties 
charged with lynching Peter Clifford begnu 
bet ore the same Justice yesterday, but little 
progress was made. Tbe cases will go before 
the grand jury to-morrovr. 

Colliding Train*. 

Kansas City, March 9.—The Journal's 
Omaha special says tho north-bound pa.v>en- 
g'*r on the Kansas City, St. Joseph and 
Council Bluffs railroad, due here this 
morning, coiliJed with a construction train 
near Pinttsmouth. Both engines and tbe 
l*aggagu-car were wrecked, tbe engineer, 
fireman and conductor of rhe passenger re¬ 
ceiving pmnful injuries. One pa&seuger had 
two ribs broken. 

Marine InlHIiaenre* 

Nkw Orleans, March 0. — Arrived — 
Steanifthics Wanderer, Port Antonio; Olivo 
Branch, Messina; Chilian, Liverpool. 

Queenstown, March 9.—Arrived—Adri¬ 
atic, New York. 

New York, March 9.—Arrived—Steam¬ 
ship! Britany, Liverpool: Persian Monurch, 
London; Maine, Bremen; Amsterdam, Am¬ 
sterdam. 

The Strike 8till On. 

Columbus, O., March 9.— The strike of 
miners still continues in the Ohio Central 
region at Sbawuee and Btraitsville. A meet¬ 
ing of miners wifi be brid at btruitsville to¬ 
morrow, when a dochdoo will be made cither 
to resume work or to make the strike general 

in both valley*. _ 

Th* C’«bnkl« Murder. 

St. Lours. March 9 —Another arrest, wa* 
made to day in the person of Henry Jncksbn, 
a negro teuuuster. in connection with the 
butchery o *: • peddler, Lavene, at Cabo- 
kia. Ill., la'! « ' . There is no doubt that 
be osbi»L*d 6: o» n tu the Uornble murder, 
line Martrii) Hlver. 

* New York il.»reh 9.—A broken flange 
precipitate 1 u-cai train uu tbu Horleui 
1 ail load into Harlem river to night. The 
few passOI&cin and trniu-baml* were 
rescued bv bmtmen. Maggie Maguire, of 
Hunter’s Point, has her skull fractured. 


\lrlory at Ln»f. 

Pittsburg • March 9.—The An*# bavo 
been lighted Ji every green-giuM bottk fac¬ 
tory in the city, te-, pt one, and vr — I. will be 
resumed mnU'W fay* at hut r vagua. 
The men bn’- . . out on a s>trlk*» . arnst a 


l’lCKRD UF. 

Dick Lusk was arrested last night by De- 
tectires Owens and Daley ou a charge of grand 
larce ly. He was taken to jail. 

“Weeping Joe” Harding baptized cix 
converts iu the river yesterday afternoon at 
Water and Thirty-sixth streets. 

The funeral survices over the remains of 
Mrs. Darnel Smith will take place at the Cathe¬ 
dral at 10 o’clock this morning. 

ChaS. F&eidenburg was on the war-path 
yesterday with & pLtol on West Market street, 
which caused his arrest by Officer Gannon. 

Hon. Joseph B. Read, who fractured his 
leg m Frankfort about *ix weeks ago, is reported 
to be convalescing by his attending physician, 
Dr. George W. Griffiths. 

H. C. Thomas, for several years a mum* 
her of the city police force, is lying dangerously 
ill at his residence, od Rowan street, between 
Sixteenth and Seventeenth. 

A series of protracted meetings will be 
held every evening this week at the Baptist 
church, corner of Walnut and Twenty-second 
streets, conducted by tne liev. Green Clay Smith. 

Charles White and bis wife, Delia, a 
young married couple, got into a flgiit last even¬ 
ing o»er Home family difference, and were locked 
up in Central station by Officers Lunn and bheok- 
er. 

Wm. McGuire, while reeling along Main 
street lost evening, lurched through a show, 
u iudow of a store belonging to L. Moses & Co., 
cuuing his hands and face. He was arrested by 
Officer McGrath. His injuries were slight. 

A boy named Chris AUea fell into the 
river at the foot of Fourth street yesterday. He 
came near drowning, but was fished out by a 
colored mau who ,wos standing near, and token 
to his home, on Floyd street, near Market. 

Disorderly methods for whiling away 
the Sabbath were prevalent In the vicinity of 
First-street station yesterday afternoon and last 
night, and ten disturbers of the peace were run 
in. One Individual forgot the rules of trade »o 
far as to call for a cigar at a store and bite off the 
end of It before remembering the depleted condi¬ 
tion of his pocket-book. Bein^ unable to pay for 
the bite, he was incarcerated to chew the cud. 

Geo. Nagle, oue of the hackmen who were 
charged with the robbery of W. H. Head tn a 
house of ili-famo on Madison street a few weeks 
ugo, was arrested last night by Officer Ellis on a 
bench warrant. It will be remembered that Na¬ 
gle was discharged by Judge Aaron Kohn. Ho 
and his companions quitted tbe city immediately 
alter being released. Nagle returned jesterdsy, 
ami being captured at tho house of his sister, 
was taken to jalL 

Dolly Duncan, a prepossessing girl of 
fourteen, living on Rowan street, between Seven¬ 
teenth and Eighteenth, went to the Twelfth-street 
statiou yesterday and asked the protection of the 
offleerm from her mother and rother, whom she 
accused of ill treatment. While tulllug the story 
of her woes, her mother came In search of her, 
aud. after explanations and recriminations, the 
chiM was induced to return home. She alleged 
that her mother had threatened her life, after 
giving her a whipping tbe night before. 

J. Quajd occupied a coll in Clay-street 
station last night on the charge of hog-stealing. 
This wus really an indirect cliarge, as he merely 
sent two men to hunt a hog thut had strayed 
away. Tb*y thought they recognized the truant 
swine In the sty of Uriah Goss, on Underbill 
ami Broadway, and captured K and conveyed it 
to his house. His two scouts were subsequently 
captured, but bn was strong in the belief that he 
bad recovered his hog until Saturday, when ho 
learned his mistake. * He then seut word to Mr. 
Grs* that he could have his hog, but the warrant 
for his arrest had already been Issued. 

Ed. Shaw, aged eloven, and Will Kane, 
aged eight, two boys who ran away from tlietr 
parents in Covington. Ky., and arrived In this 
city yesterday morning, were sent back home by 
Detective Dairy yesterday afternoon. The boys 
are evidently of the lower class, being raggedly 
dressed, dirty and unkempt. They were whist¬ 
ling. singing and playing together while locked 
up nt the Central Police ^ration, but seemed to 
understand the situation with surprising precoci¬ 
ty. They told the officers that they left home 
because they were ill treated, and intcodod I© get 
a living in LouisviUe by selling papers and black¬ 
ing boots. 

FAUSOSA L Fiji.SIS. 

Dr. J. C. Bailey, U. 8. A., is at the Galt 
House. 

L. B. Rowlett, Rowlett’s, Ky., is stopping 

at Lbe Phcenix. 

George Nuison Fenn, of New York, is at 

the Gall House. 

Bruce Carr, of Indianapolis, is at the 

Louisville Hotel. . 

Chos. J. Bohmrich, New York, is stopping 

at Rufer’s Hotel. 

W. E. Ragsdale, Hopkinsville, Ky., is at 

the Louisville Hotel. 

Mr. A. V. Goodin, of Elizabethtown, is at 
the Alexander Hotel. 

Mr. C. L. Hill, of Glasgow, is a guest at 
the Alexander Hotel. 

D. L. Wallace and wife, of Orange, N. J., 

are affhe Gale House. 

Dr. E. H. Morriam, New York, is regis¬ 
tered at Ruler's Hotel. 

Mr. W. C. Evans, of Leitchfield, Ky., ie 
at the Alexander Hotel. 

Mr. J. R. Little, of Rochester, N. Y., is 
at the Alexander Hotel. 

H. N. and W. F. Gage, of Cleveland, O., 
is at the Louisville Hotel. 

Mr. B. G. Bruce, of Lexington, arrived at 
tbe Oalt Bouse lost night. 

Mr. A. 8. Glover, Evansville, Ind., is in 
the city, a guest of Rufer’s. 

Mr. Geo. W. McGee, of Chicago, is stop¬ 
ping at the Alexander Hold. 

W. W. Randall, agent of the Madison- 
squsre Company, is At the Louisville Hu tel. 

Hon. Robert Dixson, M. P. of Australia 
Is In the city and is a guest at the Galt House. 

Mr. H. C. Trigg, of Trigg & Co., bankers* 
Gla^ow, Ky., is a guest at the Alexander Hotel 
Col. W. J. Daniel, Cromwell, Ky., and H 
51 . Daniel, Caneyvdle, Ky., are registered at Uu 
Phoenix. 

Mr. W. O. Sweeney, a prominent mer¬ 
chant of 1-uncaster. Ky.. is spending a few days 

in Louisville. 

A. K. Thomas. J. Van Dokknm. C. T. 

WctUe. Cincinnati: Clarence Wood. W. P. Bybee. 
Glasgow. K. W. Blcgti, Q. Shumate. Newbera, 
Term.; C. F. Tromman. ShepherdsviUe, ore 
stopping at the Alexander Hold. 

How to Hold Him. 

[R,theater Union.] 

I called recently ©n a bride of a few 
montba, earlv one’morning, and found her 
pouring tbe breakfast coffee for her uu$band. 
8ho was fairly submerge l in tbe foamy bil¬ 
lows of a sra-green robe, nnd ou her head 
wus a cap of iiioreintricataconstruction than 
1 could dearly descrii*© in half a column. 
After she had kissed her spouse good-bye for 
the day and wo were alone in her boudoir 
»be threw off thu liwtd-drens and changed tho 
elaborate gown for n plain one. 

••Good heavens me!” I raid: “is it possi¬ 
ble that you achieve such a careful toilet, 
simply for your husband!” 

“8ufo to but on it,” was tbe reply. “Yon 
mean to marry some imiel Well, take my 
advice. When vou have once taken a hu»- 
baud keep him. Don’t let tbe charm of 
fascination be broken through your own 
cnrelessn -v>. The greatast danger, don’t you 
*ee is ttmt tbe sameness of ouo wife, ngbfc 
along, will tiro him or you. Now, you can’t 
effect any actnal changes tn yourself. W hat- 
ever novelty of person yon present must be 
extraneous. Isn’t that so?’* 

“I guess it ts.” 

••Well, I came to tbe conclusion that the 
time to show myself in new assets to my 
hubby was iu the mommg. I have male it 
a point to get a great nnnilier of odd toilets 
to npr*?ar in before him at breakfast. That 
captures him anew rverv morning, makes 
rue think about him all day long, and bruits 
him Lack lo me at night an ardent lover ” 

1 quote this advice for what it is worth. 
Aubow, it seems reasonable, doesen’t it! 

Arreatrd for .Murder. 

Chicago, March 9.—The Daily Neil'S 1 
M true. 111., special says William Honglnud 
was arrested to-day. charged wuh complltuty 
in the triple murder at Mt. Pulaski. De¬ 
tectives sav another arrest will soon be made. 


Chairmau of thu Executive Committee. Tho I reduction eig tbs, 


Sleeveless Jersey jacket* are shown of 
crocheted possum, nterie cord, with jet beads 
in tbo raesbes, and the star borders of pa»**- 
menteri* uear the fringed edge. 















































































































THE COURIER-JOURNAL; LOUISVILLE. MONDAY. MARCH 


Kind Messages From Conrisr-Joarn&l Subscribers 
Received Last, Week. 


“A 800 ad Paper Prom alga ting Sound Doctrines.” 


G. K. Baynham, Cadiz , Ky., says: “Tbo 
people in this county cun nut do without the 
nest paper in the world. The Indies are as 
anxious lor it as the men.” 

./. 1. McCttw, Wythcville, Va., wits: “I 
will renew iny subscription in u few days. 
There is no one more charmed with your val¬ 
uable paper than myself, ami ail my friends 
who lead your paper say it certainly is the 
first in the United States; contains more val¬ 
uable literature.” 

T. W. Baird, Oak Pi dye, La., wiys: 
“Tell Watterson that Louisiana is fully in 
accord with his views of ‘tariff,’ except 
those parts of the State interested in sugar; 
the balance of the Stafe wish the tariff on 
sugar reduced as w«il ns ou other articles. 
Yet we will carry our State for atm iff 
reform Presidential candidate. Many of us 
have seen klr. Vance's ideas, as expressed 
in the interview with ‘Old Fogv.’ and 
ail North Lonisuna indorse Mr. Vance’s 
views.” 

W. 17. Cullen, Austin, Texas, say*: “Wo 
aro ‘solid’ on the ‘tariir-fer-reveuue-ouly * 
platform, and love our old ‘tariff flghtiug 
Coukikk-Jouknal,* and wish it a long, 
prosperous and happy career. In the future, 
as m the past, stuud up for ‘right, * and in 
the North, Mouth. East and VVe*t your 
friends will be counted by the thousands.” 

A d. Sectrst, Randolph, Kan., says: “The 
result of taking and reading your paper tbe 
post year (and, by the way, the (ir»t and 
only 'Democratic* and ‘low-tariff’ Jour¬ 
nal over kept in the family), bos been my 
thorough conversion to too principles of 
'free trade,' and that in spite of a fifteen- 
years’ reading of the New York Tribune. I 
wish a horseback ride could bo made 
through every umtrict in our uoble State to 
arouse the tanning class from their lethargy 
and urge thorn to snake off this ‘protection’ 
incubus. A wcli-pianuod and organized cam¬ 
paign in Kansas on this great issue would 
work wonders.” 

T. D. Hoskins, Santa Horn, Cal., sends in 
a club, and says: ••Will send oil tho names 
that 1 can. The Cor hi Kit -Jochnal b. grow¬ 
ing in popularity here. If a little putt on the 
back will serve to encourage you, just con¬ 
sider the CouRUtit-J ournal patted by yours 
*uly.” 

W. ft*. Lawson* Walker's Station, Tr.ras, 
sends for a lot of sample copies and says: 
‘‘I have sont about ail the subscribers from 
thisplace that I will be able to send, from 
the fact that nearly ev^ry intelligent reader 
is alioady taking me Courikr- Journal. I 
suppose there are nearly 100 subscribers at 
this office.” 

Cyreniu* Wade, Jamestown, Ky ., writes: 
“I send you 11 names, and hope to be able 
to send more soon. I charge no cotnwisMou 
in order to make it so cheap that no one need 
bo without the best paper published. It is 
easy to get subscribers, because you are de¬ 
termined to force the fight this year upon 
principle. Success to the Courier- Journal 
and the principles it advocates.” 

Chas. Hardin. Pussellville, Ga., sends in 
a list of subscriber*, and says: ”1 can not 
close without, in a feeble manner, trying to 
express my appreciation nf your paper. To 
say that it is the best paper 1 ever read (and 
i nave taken several) would be very lightly 
expressing it. In short, I would not be 
without your paper for double Us subscrip¬ 
tion price. Long may it flourish to light 
‘inouutiohos’ aud the ‘robber tariff’ is my 
wish.” 

L. L. Ha tecs, Olathe, Kan., writes: 
“Please note the fact that 1 sent you a club 
of five subscribers on February 11 , 1884. 
Until a corresponding date uoxt year 1 snail 
send only one or two at a time a» 1 procure 
them, at club rates, which you allow. 1 give 
subscribers the benefit of your commission. 
The satisfaction of knowing that the Coc¬ 
kier- Journal is being well circulated 
amply repays me for my trouble. Please 
semi me a few sample copies of yogr next 
weekly issue. Long may the grand old 
Courier-Journal battle for the rights of 
the people and against rings, monopolies and 
that thieving tariff. May it never falter in 
the good work uulll it shall accomplish the 
grand object of ‘turning tbe rascal*out.’ ” 
Jos. A. Settle, Clifton Station, Fa., 
sends in his renewul, and says: “Like many 
other ‘dyed in the wool' Democrats, 1 find it 
essential to my thorough instruction in the 
important political questions of the day. In 
truth, it is the best paper published, aud 
well worthy the attention of all true, un¬ 
selfish patriots, whether KepttbJh ans or 
Democrats, and will be read . by all such 
with equal interest.” 

F. B. huck, Waterport, N. F., save: 
“1 inclose renewal of my subscription, which 
expires February 19. 1 am a Republican, 

but I am much interested in your jour il, 
aud will do wlmt I can to extern! its circula¬ 
tion. The inclosed list of names for sample 
copies are all substantial and prominent 
Democrat* in Orleans county, aud ought to 
1 *» interested in so able a joui ual a* yours. 

1 can best serve you by sending names.” 

Tho 8. F, Robossvn, M. 1)., Flint stone , 
Md . says: “Your journal in much liked by 
our people; its spirit aud tone are what the 
Democratic party want. It is to be hoped 
that many more journals of our count ry mar 
fall into tbe same groove and homMly uud 
boldly proclaim our party's principles.” 

L. P. Vent, Braxton, Miss., send® in a 
club of six and says: “1 will send you more 
subscriber® just as soon as 1 can get them. 

I do not work for a commission; 1 work for 
the good of my country. I wbh every fam¬ 
ily m my county could tako the Courier- 
Journal, the best paper in tho United 
States.” 

It. IF. Hunter, Michigan City, Miss., 
sovb: “Keop the tariff music lively. Suc¬ 
cess to tbe Courier-Journal and hurrah 
for McDonald’,’ 

J. P. Morris , Trou, Ata., says: “I con¬ 
sider tbe Courier-Journal the very beat 
patter in tbo world.” 

U. F. Beverly, Dixon's Mills, Ala., says: 
“1 make you a 'Now Year’s gift* of f 6 ur 
moro subscribers. Success to yonr grout 
paper; if needs only to bo read to be appre¬ 
ciated.” 

H . J. Me Kiroy, Butlerville, Ky., says: 
“Keep up the tight in favor of a 'Tariff for 
Revenue Only.’ Upon that issue the Demo¬ 
crat* will win the next President. If they 
fall to do their duty on that subject they 
will meet with defeat.” 

H. M. Parker, Brandon. Miss., says: “I 
will try ami get others; all old subscribers 
want to renew their subscriptions, but some 
may overlook the time of expirotiou. The 
Courier-Journal is looked upon as the 
best paper in tho United State® without any 
exception. I sent you last year twenty or 
more subscribers, aud charged you no com 
mission, and will do so again if 1 can find 
time.” 

IF. //. Edwards, Merino , Col., says: 
“This is a uew place, but there is no place so 
new in this country but what it w&nte and 
must have the Courier-J ot ;rn al. This is a 
stock country, and very thinly settled; but 
it is best to have it so, as every man wants 
much territory for his herds and flocks. We 
think the Courier-Journal gives us prac¬ 
tical ideas ou stock-raising, ns well as true 
ones politically. As every uew place should 
be started right, we have started throe ma¬ 
jority Democratic. Are we not sure to win 
next November? 

S. V. Woodard , North Pose, Wayne 
County, N. Y., says: ‘‘Gentlemen, inclosed 
pleaso fiud my renewal and one now sub¬ 
scription. I am sorry the club is no larger 
this time, but I have the promiso of some 
more before long: but as my subscrmtion has 
ibout expired and os I do not wish to lose a 
single number, [ send what I have for the 
best paper in the world.” 

(.Vq, W. Thackstoy, Chestnut Mound . 
Ten 11 ., says: ”1 think it u the paper for the 
people. And I tell them so, and a great many 
are seeing it in that way. There are about 
three times os many sutaenbers horu now as 
stany other time.” 

JJrs. .Jarir M. Seatt, Denver, Col., says 
I consider the Courier-Journal the best 
paper published, and would ruthergo hunerv 
Lban do without it.” 

Henry Clay Jones, Mt. Pleasant, Tenn., 
lays; "Please do not let me miss a copy of 
my political bible, the Courier-Journal, 
the foremost paper in influence in America. 
Watterson has indeed honored the mantle of 
the girted Prentice, bringdowo the tariff.” 

Mrs *r C - l*rry, State Line , Miss., 
says: 1 can not do without the ‘Old Cou¬ 

rier Journal;’ it lias been my *tay for 
more than ten year*. ” 

,r - yitinay, Mt. Pleasant, Neb., says: 
"Ail are well pluased with your paper for 
you advocate right doctrine on the ‘Tariff 
Question for us ‘Western boy*.» ” 

J. A. Si*k, Strawberry Plains, Tenn., 
.sys: "Y\ e regard your paper on invaluable 
-can’t keep house without it. 1 am doing 
l can for Us success; think it bag a larger 


circulation in this community than anv other 
pa|>er. ” 

J. IF. rrather, Wpodland Mills, Venn., 
sny%: “The Courier-Journal lias become 
to my family almost a necessity, having tieeu 
constantly in my owu and my father’s fam¬ 
ily for. I presume, a quarter of a century 
under Its different forms—in fact, since my 
earliest recollections.” 

H. C. Perkins, Uraefenbery. Ky ., savs: 
“YVould be glad if every voter in the land 
would take tho Courier-Journal, then 
they would learn something of that ‘thieving 
tariff ’ and help to tear it down. As to my¬ 
self, 1 wouldn’t be without it for twice the 
amount it costs. Hurrah! for tho 'best man’ 
the Democrat* can bring to the ‘front’ this 
fall.” 

Jno. P. Buchanan, Murfreesboro. Tenn., 
says: "Please find inclosed $7 70 for your 
most excellent paper, which at this lime in so 
manfully battling for the people, and let us 
assure you that a hearty ‘auien' goes up from 
us all in this section, for the nobio fight you 
are making. May you stand like a ‘rock’ 
and may ‘victory r be the result of your well- 
aiuied blows. Let the ‘people’s interest' ever 
be uppermost in this, ‘The Laud of the Free 
and the Home of the Brave. ’ ” 

T. I\ Golden, of the *' O'Neill Tribune J' 
O'Neill City, Neb., says: "No tiewapupcr 
finds a more welcome visit to us ;Uaii the 
Courier-Journal, aud we hope to secure 
100 subscriber® for you betweeu now and 
spring. Long live the Courier-Journal, 
that so truthfully and forcibly advocuum the 
reduction of luxation, thus leaving what be¬ 
longs to tho people in their possession.” 

B. J. Bussell, Newton, Iowa, says: *‘I 
have taken your paper for about twenty 
Tears, and anxiously look for it every 
Wednesday morning. I have noticed ulm.^t 
nil great measures that aro promulgated by 
the editor of the Courier-Journal, either 
for State or nation, are sure to be udopted 
uot far distant.” 

F. A. Renick, Academy, W. Fa., sends 
a subscriber’s name for four and a half years, 
and says: "I sent him a coujfie of copi. s of 
the Courier-Journal a few day* tines, 
which made such an impression that he 
wants the paper speedily and fora long time, 
wbicli will mean till death. 1 do not wfish 
any commission for obtaining subscribers to 
your paper. I only wish 1 could send you a 
million instead of one. A few more such 
shots as tho article which appeared in the 
Courier-Journal of the ystn ult. ought to 
change the most stubborn Radical that over 
lived.” 

James IF. Connor, Winfield , Kan., says: 
“Ail who receive your paper prouounce it 
'boss.’ Most of the people here are Re¬ 
publicans, but there are enough D<<m«crau 
to make some fun at elections. The Demo¬ 
cratic party is (he party of progress here; no 
‘old fogies’ or ‘tnnss- backs’ tolerated. 
The only principle the Republicans have ad¬ 
vocated in six years is prohibition, and seem 
inclined to drop that, when it looks as 
though they would bo defeated with it on 
the platform. Your papor is doing a va*t 
amount of work to bring public opinion up 
to the stickiug point in this ‘revenue re¬ 
form.’ I feel that rov pen is inadequate to 
express to von 1 he praise so richly merited 
by the Courier-Journal.” 

S. L. Sanders , Friendship , Tenn., says: 
“I am acting as agent for your paper, not 
for profit, but because it luliy expound* (he 
doctriues I love—‘tru- Democracy.' I do 
not charge a cent commission to those sub¬ 
scribing, as I believe 1 am amply paid bv tho 
increasing circulation of a paper that pro¬ 
poses to lessen my burdens by proper legisla¬ 
tion; denouncing in every issue the ‘thieving 
tariff,’and making its crimes so plain that 
no man, with intelligence to vote at all, can 
err. I assure you that twice the number of 
copies of the Courier Journal com* to this 
office every week for subscriber* than any 
other newspaper; and 'three loud cheers’ for 
•McDonald,' ‘Carlisle,’ ‘the Courier-Jour¬ 
nal,’ and 'Democracy.* I will add. that 
from some cause—fcuppofte its position on 
the‘tariff Question'— that one of our State 
pupers, tbe Nashville American, has greatly 
decreased in circulation here.” 

J. ft. Ihompson. Brazil, Tenn., says: 
“Very likely I shall seud you more aubsenb- 
ers in a short time. The principles marked 
off by tho Courier-Journal, a 'Tariff i<»r 
rcveuue only,’on which to fight tbe next 
battle, are. in our judgment, tbe true ground 
upon which to stand. We are glad to see tho 
Courier-Journal so ubly defeudmg its 
position against that poisoned sheet, the 
Nashville American, which is nntogouixiug 
a great majority of Tennessee Democrat*, 
wi»o despise the narrow, selfish policy that 
can see no farther than the little manufac¬ 
turing interest of A. 8. C. and a few others. 
Flog the American like Marshas, till it 
wnthvs beneath the ‘trenchant blade' of 
your gallant editor, Henry Watterson.” 

IF. T. Milford , Antreville, S. C., writes: 
“1 will send other subscription* soon. Mv 
neighbors are beginning to const ier tbe 
Courier-Journal as I do—the best paper 
pubibbed. The sermons by Dr. Talma** 
ore worth the cost of the pai^er, and the 
story 'In Spite of Fate' is just splendid.” 

//. //. Norman, Murfreesboro, Tenn., 
says: “I am a new subscriber to the true 
and living Courilr-Jolrnal, the noble 
leader of a glorious cause. Her blows are 
telling from ‘Dan to Beersheba.’ Mav she 
live till time shall be uu more (if she is al¬ 
ways a* true to the line as she is to-day). 
Tell Watterson to watch well and keep the 
ball moving, for it is growing a* it rolls, aud 
will come out all right.” 

I. S. Grace, Centre Pbint, Ark., writes: 
“8ome uuie in the year 1832, if l mistake 
not, uiy brother, Preston Grace, beenme a 
subscriber for the Louisville Journal. I 
was then 20 years old. and soon became a 
constant reader and great admirer of that 
journal and of its editor, George D. Prentice, 
in so much that when be died I thought the 
light or the world—as a newspaper editor— 

vbnd been removed, and that I ‘ne’er should 
look upon hU like again.' But, enthusiast 
a* 1 wn* in mv admiration of George D. 
Prentice, 1 am now free to confer that in 
my judgment the light which I thought bad 
been forever extinguished bv his demise 
has been not ouly reilluiueJ, but intensified 
in tbe person of Henry Watterson, tue 
Prince of political editors of the present dav, 
and the Courier-Journal uuder its present 
able management ranks A 1 among tho 
great political newspapers of the united 
States. Thus believing, I will not presume 
to tell you what to write nor how to write 
it, but will simply say, ‘lav on, Macduff.' 
etc. The Courier-Journal u goo 1 enough 
for mt just a* it U, wherefore I shall do all 
1 can to increase its circulation. Long may 
it wave.” 

J. L. Quillen, Whitesburg. Tenn.. says: 

'I can not afford to be without the Cou¬ 
rier-Journal. and would not for the next 
year for to. We think that no man can 
read it one year without being a better man. 

1 am for tariff reform, but do not want 
you to l»ear so heavy a* to split things, as it 
might b© done before all are properly posted 
in regard to its beuelit*. McDonald for 
President, Cleveland for Vice-President.” 

J. F. Buff, Comersville, Miss., savs: 
our paper is well liked here, and I thiuk 
I shall be able to send you another club in a 
few days. Everybody praise* the COURIER- 
JOURNAL. It ha* the largest circulation of 
any paper that comes to this ortfie. and 
would bo larger still if the people had the 
money. We are all for ‘revenue reform and 
Democracy.’ ” 

Du Low Temperatures Produce "Cold*?*’ 

[Po utar Scitthc* Monthly.} 

So man can freeze him»*lf into a catarrh. 

In cold weather the hospitals of our North¬ 
ern cities sometime* receive patients with 
both feet and both bunds frozen, with frost¬ 
bitten ears ami frost-* .re eve®, but without a 
trace of a catarrhal affection. Duck-hunters 
may wadeall day in a frozen swamp w ithout 
affecting the functions of their respiratory 
organs. Ice-cutters not rarely come lu 
tor an involuntary plunge-bath, and 
are obliged to let their clothes 

dry on their backs: it may result in a bowel- 
complaint. but no catarrh Prolonged ex¬ 
posure to a cold storm may in rare cases in- 
dueo a true pleural fever, a very trouble 
some affection, but as different from a 
“cold” os a headache is from a toothache— 
the upper air-passages renin.n unaffected. 
Sudden transition from heat to cold doss 
not change the result. In winter tbe "pud 
dlers” of a rolling-mill have often to pass 
ten times au hour from the immt-di 
ate neighborhood of a furnace to the chili 
draught of the opeu air; their skin becomes 
os rough as an armadillo’s, their hair be¬ 
comes grizzly or lead colored; but no ca 
tarrb Ou my last visit to Mexico, 1 as¬ 
cended the peak of Orizatm from the south 
side, and reached tho crater, bat usd m per 
sr*iration; and, fullowiug the guide across to 
the northwest slope, wo w*re for ten min 
ute* exposed to so ice-storm that swept the 
summit in blasts of fitful ferv. Two of my 
companions, a boy of sixteen and an old 
army surgeon, were not used to mountain- 
climbing, and could hardly walk wheu we 
got back to our camp in the foot-hills but 
our lungs were none the worse for the ad¬ 
venture. Dr. Franklin, who, like Bacon and 
Goethe, had tue gift of aaticipalivo intui 
Uons, seems to have suspected the mistake of 


tho cold-air fallacy. “1 shall not attempt to 
explain,” says h», "why dump clothe* oc- 
coHion cold*, rather than w*t ones, because l 
doubt tbe fact; I believe that neither the 
one nor the other contributes to tins effort, 
and that tbe causes of colds are totally in¬ 
dependent of wret and even of cold.” 

Kilkenny <‘M Ptctir. 

[Charleston Xeirsand Courier.] 

On© day Irn-t week a Mr. Pepper registered 
at tbe hotel at Yarboro, N. C., and in a few 
minutes a Mr. Mustard entered the office aud 
calied for a hot dinner. A local wag sa\s 
that Mr. Mustard ate pept^r for dinner and 
that Air. Pepper ate mustard. 

Jratou* of Poor Hwccy. 

[AVtr York Commercial Advertiser.] 

The German Chancellor, with all bis Machi¬ 
avellian abilitv, through hi® cowardly and 
ungenoroiih attacks upon oaf Minister, merely 
shows tho weakness of bis band. Being n 
good deal of a hog himself, ho is jealous of 
tho great American gruliter. 

R xhl You \re. 

[Balttmore Bay.] 

If the Democratic party would win in the 
coming cmniM&igu, they niunt win on princi¬ 
ple. Stick a pm right there and keep it 
there. A diq>«silion to accept Republican 
pla:forms for a fighting grouud not only in¬ 
sures but deserves defeat. 

THE RIVKKAND WEATHER 

LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE OF LOUISVILLE. 
Lauiuue -a* 14’ oil*. I Longitude du* \J AT. 


of Memphis. St. Louis. 2 
Si- Louis. 3 r. u. Cl«ar. 


p. Henry Lourey. 


Memphis 
. ■ ■ Evansville. 


DIS- 


SIGNAL SERVICE BE PORTS. 

TUE LVDICATIONH FOR THE VARIOUS 
TKICTS FOR TO-DAY. 

Washhtotox, March 10. 1 a u — Forth© South 
Atlantic Mutecohlrr. fair weather, northerly, 
verging to northwesterly winds, higher pressure. 

tor the Western Gulf States, w inner, fair 
weather. Increasing bouihncaieriy winds, lower 
pressure. 

For the O»io tallct and Tennessee, warv- 

XU, FAIR WEATHER, VaKIATH.E WINTi*. AKIFTINO TO 
SOUTHCASTKRt.r. DIMINISHING. PUECEDri) IN THE 
EASTERN PART RT INCREASING PRXASVRE. 

For the Lower Lake region, slightly colder, fol¬ 
lowed by wanner, generally lair weather, we t- 
rrlv winds, backing to southeasterly. Increasing, 
followed by diminishing prr-^ure. 

For the Upper Lake region, warmer, fair 
weather, fallowed by snow, wind* shi ting to 
scmheaslerly, d.mim-hlng pressure. 

For the Upper .Mississippi valley, warmer, fair 
went Iter. Pillowed by snow . and m the southern 
port by rain, increasing southeasterly winds, di¬ 
minishing preismre. 

For the Missouri valDy. warmer, threatening 
weather, with rain in the non hern portion, partly 
snow. incro>i*ihg aoutheriv w inds, lower pressure. 

For the Pacific coast, threatening weather, 
with rain. 

Colorado, rain ami snow. 

Kain is indicated for the Western Gulf State®, 
Upper Missi-alppl and Lake region, pari!y as 
Kuow in the up)>cr portion of the tw o last districts 
Tuesday. 

The extensive storm In the Rocky Mountain 
region will continue eoatwardly. 

The Upper Ohio ,river, Ten ie®***© and Missis¬ 
sippi below Hr-leua will contluue ruing. The 
Mi-nissippl above Helena will continue slowly 
falling. 

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD — SIGNAL SER¬ 
VICE. U. S. A. 

Official.] Locuvclle. Ky.. March 0, 1ftS4. 


1 1 s.ts f'.-'s 

I A. M A M. iP. if. IP. if. 


I0:*S 
P. M. 


Barometer. 
Thermomefr 
Dew-point.. 
Humidity... 

Wind . 

Velocity .... 
Weather. 


30.179 30.308 30.338 311.400 30.438 
31.5 
24.0 
72 

s. w. 

3 

(Jlo'dy 


30.0 

30 0 

J19.0 

30 0 

213 

22.5 

2'-. 5 

21.3 

79 

72 

73 

68 

W. 

w. 

w. 

w. 

19 

16 

112 

11 

llo'dy 

Lt * w 

jclo’dy 

Clo’dy 


Mean daily barometer . 
Mean daily thermometer.. 
M**nn dally dew-poiut. 
Mean daily humidity 
Maximum thrnnoiuriei. 
Minimum thermometer 
Rainfall, inche*. 


. 30..I18 

. 30.5 

. 23.0 

. 74.3 

. 385 

. 20 5 

. 0 01 

Maximum velocity of wind. 20 miles per hour, 
went. 

COMPARATIVE OBSERVATIONS. 
Louisville. March 9. 1884. 2:25 p. u. 
Observations tagen at the same mom-nt of 
time at nil stations 7 a. m.. 3 p. m.. 11 r u. 

I Washington timei: 


Stations. 


WIND, j J 

HliEs'..-. 


2>l*0 


State of 
'eat her. 


02 n. 

34 N wr 


00 E. 
HI E. 


51 8 . 


35 n 
29 w 

30'wKI 
42 x w Lt. 

34 x w 
31 


11 ... . Clear, 
fij.Clear. 

11 ..Haze. 

81 .Clear. 

Lu l.ilrar. 

Ll.| .... Clear. 




11 


E Gulf States: \ 

New Orleans 30.20 
Vicksburg 30.3 j 

W ii'lf States. 

Galveston.... '30 30 

Imliannla.. > 0.28 
Little Rock. |30,38 
Shreveport . 30.32 
0. V l ifjViiii; 

Chattanooga .’SO. 38 
Chi cltinnn .. |30.3I 

Luuihvdie... 30.34 
Memphis .. 3o.4u 
Nath.hie ..J;k).3u 
Puutmrgb . 30.09 
Up. Miss. Up: 

Cairo. ...30.43! 

Davenport,. '30...0 

Dubuque 

Keokuk.. 

La Crosse. 

M. Louts .. 

SL Paul. .. 
kiw uri FI; 

Leaven w t h. 

Omaha. 

Y an kirn . 

Ex. NnrtInvest \ 

Ltsmsrck... 30.00 
Alulrtle Slope; 

DodS*< tty- 30.10 54 *.e. 

FortUUotL 30 16 58 s. 

North I'Utte 30.02' 39 
S'them Sloiw: 

F t Stockton 30.16 0!‘ s.e. 

Lal.e Hetjiot »; 

_>‘b iesgo. ,, 30.30 25) it. 

• Inappreciable. 

COMPARATIVE DATA—CORRESPONDING DATS 
or DIFFERENT YEARS. 

Lot uvilul Ky., March 0. 1884. 


33'n. 

30.331 24 Z \ 

30 . :m w « \ 
30.28 24 s. w 
30 40 31 w. 
30.27 22 a. 

30 3 o 42 a. 
30.26 32 s. 
30.10 26 a 


15 ... CJoutly. 

10 ivm 1 loudy 
12 • k'loudy. 

Clear. 

O’ • Cloudv. 
10 0.18JLt. bnoe. 

7 • Cloudy, 

flj . Chur. 

10.Clear. 

.t.Char. 

8 ... Clear. 

7 .;...(dear. 




Lt. |. ... 
12. 


.Clear. 

Clear. 
Clear. 
1 lear. 

Clear. 


401 ... Fair. 
36 ..j. Fair. 
.... . .. Fair. 

28 '... Fair. 

6 ... Clear. 



1 HKHMOMEl CM. ^ ^ fij* 


f 5 

?! S 
s f 

^ 2-3' 


v a. 

3 kil? 

z %. 

72. 


i \m 



1874 30.162 4 LU 51.0.30.0 5^0 n'w 
1KT5 III) ON"’ .IT ? 1 4K.U 29 0 tW. 7 R. w 

73 0,42 0 52.0 a. 

28 .0 20.0 59 0 w 
73.0 59.0 40.3 'h.s 

74 0 Mo 0 43 3 s. 

59 0 37.0 7i».0 N. 

40 0i38 e 79.7 w. 
07.0145 U 8 I.Uk 


1876 30.082 37. 

1876 20.888 60.51 

1877 .'10.208 22.2 

1878 30 024 00.7 
J879 29 WHV0a.7 
1880129.064*49.3 
1881 lO.lSh 40.7 


1 ha. ;20.?Kb 
1883 2 -. 88.1 


6.5.0 

4-3 61 0(35.0 3.3 




. IClear. 
..(Hear. 

, ear 
..iFair. 
0.02 Fair. 
..... (cloudy 
.....Hear 
0.f»2[Fair. 
Cloudy 
Cloudy 
Clear. 
Cloudy 


1.18 

aoi 


• 1 . tcheg 
3 Incites 
0 inches 
8 inches 
6 inches 


1884J30.318 :J0.6| 38.0120 0174.3 
Stage of H r afenn < anal for Corresponding Bays 
If 73 . 0 feet 2 Inches 1979... 10 fret 4 Inches 

1874. 12 feet 0 Inches 1880 .13 feet 

1875. .10 feet 11 inches 1881. 10 feei 

1870... 8 feet 3 inches Ink*. .. 12 reel 

1877. 9 feet 7 Inches 1 n83. . 8 Teel 

1878. 10 feet 0 incites, 1884... 10 feet 

• Inappreciable. 

RIVER TELEGRAMS. 

THE RIVER AT PITTSBURGH. 

[Npeciai to the Courier-Journal. I 
PrrrsBrRnf?, March 9.—The river is rising 
steadily, with indications that there will lie 15 to 
16 feet before the rise is out. It rained la*t night 
and anowed. and is colder to-day. The (2. W. 
llatchelor and Chesapeake arrived. The Katie 
Stockdale aud Chancellor are due to-night. The 
Chesapeake lies over until Thursday, her regular 
day. Several boats will get out on the present 
rise with coal. Boats in port—C. W. Batchelor. 
C. W. And- rsno, Percy Keisey. James Gilmore,' 
Josh Cook. Joe Nixon, Bam Miller. Baltic. Toni 
Rees No. 2, Joe Walton and Diamond. 


PiTTsnrnon. March 9, Night.-River 13 feet 1 
Inch and rising, bnowing. 

WHKELIKO, March 9. Night—River 8 feet 3 
inches and rising Departed—Diurnal. Parkers- 
bur^. 9 a. m. ; KsUe Stockda e, l*m»burKh. l p. 
a . with bbr trip. Arrived—Jennie rarapbell 
from below, with tow. Passed up— Beil© Mc¬ 
Gowan and Tom Dodiworlh. with empties. It 
ranted all laet nbjht and snowed nearly ail dav 
The steamer R.-Kulnr will he here Tue*da to run 
in place of >teamcr Courier in the Wheeling and 
Parkerwbuij; trade Ice has about all disap¬ 
peared. V\ rather snowing and cold. 

Cincinnati. March 9. NUht-River 42 feet 6 
Inches and riaiug. Fair and cald. 


Evansvium. March 9. Night.-River 22 l-io 
feet and n»lng. Cloudy and cold Arrived— 
SprinRer, from Oociunati; Guthrie. Louisville: 
W. F. Nesbit and John Gilbert. Teune.soe river; 
Uty or Frankfort, Louisville. Deported - 
Springer. New Orleans, 5 p. m. ; Gilbert, Cincin¬ 
nati, 10 p. n. 


r*i9 Ar \^’. W ft reh 9, Nigbt— Arrived—Arkansas 
C ity. \lck*bui*. 3 a. n ; J-imes W Gaff. Mem¬ 
phis. I f. *.: t.arris Caldwell. Ohio. 3 . Denari 
•?- Arkansas rity. St. femis. 5 a. n. ; Annie P. 
Silver, at. Louis, lu; UAff, Ohio. 3 r. u. Cloudy 
and cool. 


March H, Night.-Arrived-None. 
Departed—Non** River fallen 5 inches: 9 feet 6 
inches by the gtuge Clearaud cold. The Henry 
r tank is due fmin New urleaus, and will leave 
for that place Wodnesday as an independent 
boat, in opposition to the Annie P. stiver. 

Memphis. March 9, Night. -River falling. De¬ 
parted—City of Helena, Vicksburg, lp. n.; Beils 


LOCAL Birtiti REPORT, 
ARRIVAL# AND DEPARTURES. 

Name. F> *»m To. 

Ib*n Franklin.Cincinnati .Cincinnati. 

Ariadne... .Cincinnati.LvAiiKVlHe. 

Buckeye State. Cincinnati .. 

Fashion.Henderaou.. 

Mountain Boy. Cincinnati... 

BOATS DUE. 

Rainbow.. Henderson. . 

RIVKR. BUSINESS AND WEATHER. 

Thk river rose ‘20 inches here during the 
P®*t 24 hours, and was rising lust evening with 
HI feet lt» inches in the canal and 8 feet 8 inches 
in the chute on the falls. Uu»tue&* fair. Weather 
cloudy, cold aud wintry. 

BOATS LEAVING THIS DAY. 

The Hornet for Kentucky river at 3 p. M 
The Fa hion for Henderson at 4 p. m. from 
the root of Fourth street 
The City of Madison for Cincinnoti at 
2:42 r m. from the foot of Tluni street. She's a 
"darling. ’* 

The yn-eat ami “only” electric light Guid 
Ing Star leaves for New Orleans direct at 10 
o’clock this morning. Capt. J D. Heeler, nn old 
and popular coromuurier. la in charge, and Mr. 
Memo* McIntyre la clerk-both clever and pof>- 
u.ar geutlcmen. We commend the Star to pus 
sengcr* aud ship|>ers. 

OUR LOG. 

This is “Old Hog’s” day. 

Another cold wave struck us a blizzard 
yesterday morning. 

Justice and law ought to bundle up our 
City Court and t*>K« it into tin* river. 

Joe Blakemukk *hi|>j>cd a lot of mules to 
Memphis on the Buckeye Slate yesterday. 

Tnr Guiding Star gets some freight and 
People here and !eave>» this morning for New 
Orleans. 

Oun street* are in a miserably ttiuddv con- 
dilioti, and the country may be safe, but the 
sidewalks am'L 

The funeral of the late Capt. Henrv A. 
Jones took place at Cincinnati yesterday nud was 
largely attended. 

Dan. Lackv, second clerk of the St. few- 
reu e. tiaid our city a flying visit on the B«ni. 
Franklin yesterday. 

The “beautiful sun” made a feehlo at 
tempt to smile upon us yeMerdny morning, but 
winter remarked it snow use, and than it 
snowed. 

Capt. Frank Littrell and wife arrived 
from New Orleans and are the guests of Capt. 
Pink Varble. Capt Littrell's health is very bad, 
but w© hope lie will recover. 

Capt. Jas. S. Wire is President of the 
Walnut-street House Company at Cincinnati. 
Capt. Frank J. Makes In umnn;rr, ntm i apts 
\V"^* * rAnk J riakes. J D Parker and 
**• " Wise—th# "Big Four —are directors. 

1 he‘‘combination * Is a big one, and the hotel 
oue of the best in the country. 

“Skulk inarms” ride in the street-cars for 
two anil u half cents each If the poor, hard¬ 
working, tire I *hop girl rides ahe nays five cents. 

I be polio, and firetn-n pay nothing. We don't 
thuik this Is lair. It may he fair for the "skule 
marms,** but it Isn’t "half tare" to the shop 
girls. Ought to make the police and firemen ride 
on the mules. 

"Uld Heg,” of the great Guiding Star, 
pearly bioke up all the tea stores in Cincinnati 
buying ctiromos to give to his pu«*eng#Tv He 
was hound to gel awsv with the "Orphan Boy ' 1 
on the "WcHiben Wynus." So Heg got up a 
•Vorner" on chroma aud "bulled" the market. 
Heg s hard to head off. When he takes a notion 
to do a thing he does tt. He has never taken 
th- no* ion rejoin church vet, but if he does— 
that settles It. 

Old i in i : *R:iz, come heah, hov Look 
in - in deeye Did you go a ' tel! MissusShm- 
kmson dat I'd steal, an' dat I d rudder tell er lie 
on six itiott f s credit dan de trxiof fo* rash-" 
"No. didn't." said Rax "Weil, w’nt dat rou 
tole her. den?” "I tole her you could outlie a 
two yeah ole gas meter, an’ dat r f I wua er chick- 
rn au see vou im wlin' roun' <<e backyard artor 
night. I'd ro.n' darn high. L»at‘s w'at I soil;” 
and "dr ole man ’ caught him bv the nape or the 
n» c : and jerked him half way through his clothes 
before he let him go. 

The goose we ever raw 

tt a long tailed dude from Omaha; 
tie wore a great big red cravat, 

Aspotted shirt and a Mtov#> -pip* hat 
The girls nil thought him "just too sweet,” 

As long as he would pay *tid treat. 

Hut when his money nasall spent. 

Tli-v "cut" the dufie and "at h«m went,” 
Then he got in jail for bis "crooked ways” 
And be went up fnr-niuety days. 

“M. A. D.” cuntributkd a "doocid cle- 

Toh' poetic fanev to "Mr. Homebody" in the <*»• 
J. yentcrtiay. tt« don't know «bo "he. she or 
it is. but evidently "Mr. Somebody" uieuut u« 
Six lines of the "f»ome" rend an follows: 

•‘Perth* p* our p f H‘t. prophet, preacher. 

Recalls with i **in some well-trie i teacher. 

Who truilged loach ol through snow aud rain 
To cultivate hs* miguiy brain. 

O. Sir. forget the rod. the mi ap. the sting. 

And ioudiy now her prai»> » sing.” 

We don't oar* If "he, she or tt" Is ”M-A-D.” 
we can't help saying lu reply: 

"Forget?” No. never! It m -Ires us fairly shake. 
To think of t e io*/>rr?a ns -he did tn.vk*». 

And we’d run home wltu t* «r ul eyes to Pap. 

And show him marks made bv her cruel strap 
"Fu. getOur teacher? Nev*. f And you can bet 
tt hen we sit down w<- taste her hekiugs yet. 
What? "forget the rod," you say, "theMrap, the 
sum;?" 

No! No! tt e c . r»*f do anv such a thing. 

Hie teacher s gone, but memory takes no nap, 
tt e may forget u 1 ^liu*. but not her-Mmp; 

And not until witidti oiirgra*e w-’ri lad 
W.ll we lorgei imprrssions which site mail*. 

Twas she who licked us for our :ir»t offence, 
tt e ve bad n» u*« for "Hkule Marms” ever 
since 

DRIFTWOOD. 

The Ohio foi Memphis Thursdar at noon. 
The Paiis C. Prown for New Orleans Friday 
morning The Ltirk-y- Suit- pasm-u down for 
Memphis yrsterdiy... The Guiding Htar goes 
down this morning Cnpt. Sol Vors is trying to 
buy lb*C. W. Anderson, at Pittsburgh.. .The 
Houston—"our Mary "-loft New Orleans for tbe 
Uhio .Saturday evening. ...Th* J. B. Williams 
nud tow are due up to-morrow from New Oi ¬ 
lcans. l he Harry Brow u and low and tbe . 1 . s. 
Mercer and tow paa«ed Mcmphi* for New i ’rL-aus 
.•'rttuolay .The IPuubow is due up today 
The Ohio passed up night before h*st. and will 
return to Memphis Thursday The Mnuntniu 
Boy passed down yestomay The Kentucky 
river L on a high: aJ^> the Cumberland and l>u. 
n ssee The Fannie Frreat-, from up "Kain- 
iiK-k.’ was due down yestenlav Th* "Big 
Ji e ’ and tow are due up tomorrow. She returus 
to New Orleans wall au..trier big tow of coal. 

A GOVERNMENT ENGINEER QUIT ‘'SCOUR¬ 
ING.” 

f Washington National Free Press.] 

Special from Vicksburg, February 21 . «ays: 
‘‘('apt. W. L. Marshall, engineer in charge of tho 
Government work* in this (the Secondi district, 
aaked to be relieved and transferred to • om* 
other jioJnt. The (.'ommtaston, as a body, urged 
the Captain to continue in charge, but be in¬ 
sisted on being relieved, which was finally agreed 
to. A request won made to Chief of Engineers 
tt right to have Maj. Turtle, now on duty at New 
Orleans, assigned to thin place,” 

From this dispatch It would appear that Capt. 
Mardiall la becoming disgmeed with the work 
of the River CommHuion. and discouraged b«. 
ertu^e the great river won’t "scour " The emi¬ 
nent ?' Lad* guve us to understand that by 
leveeing the river a series of ‘ scouring” exploits 
would most n*suredly occur, and that this wou.d 
deepen the river bed or accelerate the current, 
reduce friction, prevent overflow and improve 
navigation. Notwithstanding these marvelous 
predictions, the river orerri les all Iwrierw plant¬ 
ed by the River < oimutadon, and moves on as it 
Please* toward tne sea. t ape Marshall evident¬ 
ly desire* to retain a remnant of hu reputation 
as an engineer and not waste it on a fruitless and 
"diuiiphool" endeavor to make the greatriver 
"scour " Tueeng.neer assigns no reason f.»r urg¬ 
ing to b«* relieved, but iu»bl»on a new field of labor, 
where river* are not to I* "scotrred." The Com- 
mission, in a body, staid with him and praved 
with to stand bv the s dp, but he would not lUtt-n. 
rhus the gull .nt enginet-r ha« lost faith In the 
••scouring" proc'-sa. but the haidlljood of the 
Commission is still staunch and firm Another 
appropriation i* the burden of tits-ir *ong 
Capt- Marshall's work i* not without fruit, as 
he made .a gr at discovery in stating the fact 
that d. Ift log® covered with mud will move down 
the river Ttds discovery is equal to that of Mrs. 
Partington, who claimed that she could mov* 
the ocean back with a mop, theref-re both are 
entitled to a monument, which should be erected 
on tit.it pile of rocks ai Iu* e Prorideuce left lu 
the river channel by tire Eads liailroad River 
Commission. 



The best evidence in the world of th# 
purity snd exccUenoe M Blackwell** Bull 
Durham S m okPig Tobacco is found m thr 
fact that the fame of this tobacco Increase* 
from year to y*nr This cnuld uot be the 
case if it were merdy ** gotten up toadl," 
or had any dubioua or dangemus mgr*, 
(henta tn it Among tuilliutia of users of 
aU nationalities, surely aome one would 
find out if it were Impure, tnjurlotis or 
nnpaiatahle. FortB years thisinbacco haa 
been acknowledged to be tbe 6 t u (« 
*wW. and every year the Bull Durham 
brand crown more popular, tbr demand for 
9 wider. , irJ d sniokiits 
moreentbuoin.' Ucover it» 
delScous cntural flavor. 

Ask yonr deafer lor It. 

Get the genuine — trade¬ 
mark of the Bull. 



1 

There is no misrhief done where 
Blackwell’s Bull Durham 
bmoking Tobacco is used. 


RA1LKOA 1» TXME-TABLES. 

"ST. Louis Alil-LLNE." 

Louisville, Lean settle and St. Louis RalL 
way. 

Bridge Depot N. K. Cor. Kourtee-nth and Main nta. 
In effect Jun- 3. 1883. 


I.v f»uigvil|e 

Lv New Albany_ 

Ar liutitiiigburg... 

Ar Princeton. 

Ar hvausviUe. 

Ar Roekport. 

Ar Uvronsboro. 

ArSt. Loubi. 


"Mall. *Expr’a 


hvanar’* 

t Acrout. 


8 . 

n* 

A 

u 

8:20 

© 

M 

1 3:40 

© 

M 

8 : 

:35 

A 

M 

8:45 

p 

M 

4:07 

© 

M 

11 

227 

A 

M 

11:44 

P 

M 

7:10 

© 

M 

1 : 

17 

P 

M 

1:34 

A 

M 

9:00 

p 

M 

1 : 

50 

© 

U 

0:40 

A 

M 

0:35 

p 

H 

1 : 

19 

P 

M 

1:10 

P 

M 

8:55 

p 

H 

2 ; 

Id 

P 

u 

2:10 

P 

M 

10:20 

p 

M 


11 

P 

M 

7:31 

A 

M 






Louisv'e 

i Night i 

Ixiulav’e 


•Mail. 

1 •Exrr's.l 

♦Accom. 

LvSt. Louis. 

7:45 a m 

7:30 P m 


Lv Owenr'iioro. 

12:15 pm. 

5:30 am 

Lv Hock port. 

2:90 P M 

1:10 pm 

0:55 a M 

Ar Evausviiie. 


9:40 a M 


, Lv Lvansville.. 

1:20 pm 


6 : 20 'am 

Lv Princeton .. 

2:12 p m 

1:5ti a m 

7:00 a m 

Ar Htiiitincburg... 

3: 7pm 

3:21 a m 

H:30 am 

Ar New AUmny.... 

6:59 p M 

6:04 A H 

12:08 p u 

Ar Louisville... .. 

7:15 pm 

630 am 

12:35 P 4 


jail FM*WlyAw52 


_ A >1 IfSE.M ENTS. 

MACAULErS THE A TeZ—SPECIAL 
MADISON SQUARE THEATER CO. 

__ ro prising: 

no Su» L £ OC £' r AN NI 1: W 88 ELL. J u. 
S l VM?A MK *. Mrtt K L davenport, dewolt 

HOP! ER. ADA GILMAN, tt H CROMPTON, 
Mn*. CECILF. KUSH aud others, will appear here 
»» fhe givatcHt dramatic sue 

hazel kirke,” 

• ° y MARCH 17. 18, 19 

ry*Llcgaut souvenir* presented to th»* ladle*. 


'Doily. 

tDally except Sunday. 

No change of car* bet ween Louiwllle and SL 
I.ouls or I.oui»riUe and Evansville. Only Hn* 
rtinn ng solid tram* witb Pullman I’aJace Sleep¬ 
ers through to SL Louis. Elegant day and smok¬ 
ing couch**. 

City ticket office, southwest eorn*r Fourth 
Mam ata. iL. and N. ticket oflicej. 

Cincinnati Southern ftattway. 

D*pot i*nth and Manfe Streets Truiua Dally. 

Shull feu* to th* South 
__ In Effect December j, 188.T 


l-envr LiUiKvill*., 

Arrive Chattanooga.[. 

Arrive Atlanta. . 

Arrive Savannah. .. 

An i»» Jacksonville. 

Arrive Meridian . . 

Arm* Vtcksnurg. 

Arrive New Ori«-ans.. 


5 \ MlSCELLAarKOUS, 

w 

, T hasimn county, Arkausaa; al*± . r al e»tate 
»* p « rt Address Mr. CASH, care of Mc- 

hibben Hotel. Fort Smith. Ark 


\\ ANTED—TO LOAN-- Money, op real estate 
m«»rtgage. In sums to suit borrowers. E. D 
FRi ER. room 15, Law Temple, J- ifih and Ureen. 

WANTED-A good breech-loading aho'gun, 
* ' No. It*, at 8u9 W. Market i»t.. up st xrs. 
mrOd&Sutf 


\\* ANTED—TO LOAN MoNEY-On Fuml 
* * lure. Ibaiicei, etc without removal. Bua- 
inevi strictly confidential. Call at 512 Ureen rsL. 
comer Fiftn. rooux No. 19. Law Temple building. 
fe27 d&Su30 * 


\\ ANTED—Ifiirofilc catarrn ami sore throat, 

f 1 , causing mgs of feinedJ and offensive breath. 

,* a ’* P J c*Uia»»l treatiuent at Dr 
LANCA&rEH S Dispensary, 313 hdurtii s»t.. near 
Market. lht 


\\ ANTED—Persons desiring speedy and |ier- 
T ’ manent cures of all pritaie and sie^cial du- 
eares. to call on Dr RICL Hours: 9 a. u. to 4 
r. u. Sundays: 2 to 4 r. u. bee adxeriiscmem. 
nu9 dll 


WAKTS—HKLP. _ 

\\f ANTED— tt'omen seeking work of any kind, 
v » and ladles wanting mu vain*, are r«’>(m-htvd 
to cal! ax tue office ol th*» Women - * CbrMiau Ah- 
soi'iation, 348 fourth »L, over Began s paper 
store, any inuruiitg from 10 10 12 o’clock, 
mriodtf_ 

Ylf ANTED—BOY tt'bo L quick aud writes a 
▼ ▼ good haiHl; salary small to begin ou. Ad¬ 
dress r ACTORV. care Courier-Journal 


\\ CITED- sm mO»8. 

\\ 

t achcr t«-%irf-e a situaiiuu; country pro 
ferred. * ’an furnish bv-st of recoui'iiemiatiuiieL 
Able to tench all the English braiichei and mo>t 
ol the sciences, tt'ould lake charge of an scad- 
tui) if desli t Acdxess W. W 524 liUhvt.. 
Lr>«dsviile. Ky. 


Arrive Louisville. . 7 

Leave Chattanooga.... 

Leave Atlanta . 

iaxar* Nat an 11 .ih. 

Leave Jacksonville..,. 

I^ave MeriJian. 

I.* xv© Vickaburc. 

Leave New Orleans_ 


i'.X press 

Kxprwa 

7:50 p m 

8:10 A M 

8:19 A Ml 

9:25 r m 

1:40 © m 

3:40 A m 

8:90 a m 

3:25 p u 

8:15 a m 10:09 © m 

10:00 p m 

7:25 a u 

6:09 a m 
0:15 a u 

3 :50 p ii 

1 Fxpre« 

P.xpreis 


6:40 r u 

i:30 a u 
11:49 r m 

9.0 1 a w 
9 Ui 
7:*.. pm 

110:50 a m 1 


7:10 % u 
7:30 i» m 
2:35 p it 
7:30 « u 
5:45 *» m 
5:55 a 
8 00 j* 

■ 

l Tlace hotel rare and elegant parlor 
cars no Cincinnati Southern. Daylight rid# over 
the scenic Cincinnati Southern. 

Iicket office 336 West Main atreet, aud depot 
Tenth mod Maple street*. 

Narrow -Gauge rattmad. 

Trelns h-ave Iaxuuviiio, didy except Sunday 
ath.30 a. m., 2:30 r. a. and fi:25 r. u. 

Arrive at Prospect W:20 a. m., 3:30 p. 

6:15 p. x. 

__ srrmxrea. 

Trains leave rrospect daily, except Sunday, aa 
7:00 a. 9:45 a. a. and 4:00 p. u. 

Arrireat Louiavdi# 7:50 x. u., 10:45 a. u and 
4:50 n. u. 

_ St.'XDAT TRAINS. 

I^are Prospe^'t at .v. u. r.nd 4:50 p. «. ; ap- 
rive at Louiavule at 1 : d a. il and 5:40 p u 
Le.iVf S . vii at 1: 5 p. u. and 0:00 p. u ar 
rive at Prospect t .:05 p. u. andC:50p. m 


KA1L KOA I» TI>1 E-TABL1CS. 

Louisville and Nashville Mail road. 

• Denot Tenth and Mapfe street s.) 

All trains are run hr Central Standard Time. 
Tx-ahia mark<si * dully; ♦ daily except Sunday. 

Arrive 
Louisville. 


In etect Ker. »■, MW. | 

For Nnst ivilfe. Mem p’s. j . 


iMcntur. Mob'e. M’nt 
g y.Pen^ hi m»d S.Q. | 
rorN.vihv e. Chau'ga. j 
Atlanta, Savannah, v 
Mncon and Southeast i 
« Jaoksonviii# and » 
Florida pomtH \ 

for Humboldt Milan i 
Mvmpiil*, Little it k. . 
and the outriwesL | 
ForKuoxv. w m Np cs. 1 
Asher, CV>|‘bla. • b*’n v 
and < ’arol 11 .a aiinu ) 
ror l^liauun. i^oudon * 
and Knoxville .. .. » 
Bow li; g fii-een \oc'n 
Bardstown Acoorumad'n 


•12:30 p m 
»9X)a M 

•8 jo A u 

•13:30 x* m 

'IK) » A H 

•12..KI p r 
• 1:00 a R, 


•12:30 pm! 

* 1:00 a uj 


2:50 p g 
2.20 a s 
7:10 a h 
2:50 p g 
2:25 a u 
2:50 p u 
2:20 a a 

2:50 p * 

2:20 a u 


':50 pm 7:10 am 


# 8:10 a « 

t4:55 p m 
♦4:25 p m 


0:40 p m 
11:00 am 
8:20 a h 


Orlenn« lr i*Lu to New 

ZJ25SL to Little Hock, 

Atlanta. Chattonooca and 
iir^i n 1 « h * • w tthout change. Tbrougii 

^e<lar Key, Ha. .sleepers ^ 2:30 a. m. train 
open in depot at 0 p. m 

L. and V /.*, R — Short.line Division. 

aVpot, river front, betwoen First am! Second. 


In effect Nov. 18. 1883 , 

in r « Piwsb 1 , ] 
Baitlmore. \\. i> i»u • 
N. Y. and the 'vast \ 
Forl^ring’n, ttakh’n. 1 
1 rdiadelphiu, Haiti-1 
muitiand New York, I 

ForCm’U. To’.lo.Det't i 
CTvel'd. Buffalo. .G- - 
b'y, Bostoiiand l-^t. \ 
i* or Cincinnati and way 1 
station* .. r 

For I/exiugton. Fr’kft t 
anj way stations f 
For Shelbyv>. Taylors- 1 
v e. lilootpn-id. etc . f 
FrankfortAccoinm n ... 
Lagrang* AcOumm'n . 


| Ie-ave 

I^uiHvilie. 


Arrive 
lvOuHs file. 


•2:30 a M 
•2:50 pm- 


1:19 A M 
12:35 P m 


•3:00 pm 7:00 i* m 


•2:50 p m 

47:40 a m 
t7:00 a M 
t2:30 r m 
♦7:00 a M 

13:55 p M 
♦5:05 p m 
♦ 3:55 p m 


1:10 am 
12:35 p m 

7:40 p m 
10:55 a M 
5:20 p m 
9:10 a M 
7:00 p m 
9:10 A M 
7:55 a v 


FUT URE A UCTIO N SALES. 

Bf THUS ANDEHS 0 H 1 CO 


boots and 


r prESDAY. March 11 . at 10 a 

1 shoes. 

\V KDNESDAY, March 12 , dry’ goods, notions, 
t ir|»fU. etc 

r rHURdJtAY. March 13. clothing, hats and 
I g«-nt* furnishing good*, etc. 

J^RIDAY, March i4, boots and shoes. 

Terms cas li._ J. l BRENT. Auct’r. 


6 f E. K. MILLER a CO. 


WANTK1 >—T1IK TRADES. 

Y17 ANTED-HARHEk - A "in inV barber" 
Address WM. HAOIO. Nashville, Tenn, 


F( > It S A L E—311 SI E i. LA X EO US 

L^CK BAL?. — FLAi£ —roitr piatna 

J lipleudJ.i put s xxus for snow-windows, 25 1 
IMtimco-a. and one plate 47x12© incites, tor »ju« 
ebrap.i i.u.neuiaw Appiioauou .uaae u. J. V. 
hbL Ui'L x. .i*. i'oon.i a * * 


F OR SALE—STORK—Goo! trade rstebUsbeJ. 

ttill rent r.Hiut on rravi able lenius. For 
particulars uddreaA NV. Ii KELLER A CO.. Cory- 
dun, Did. 


FOR S ALE -KE %.L EST \TI*. 

L n OU 8 ALK-A (iOUD 8 TORE-HOITSK AND 
1 Dtt ELI.ING tt tth all uec«-^>ar 3 outbuildings 
aqd 10 acres uf very rich laud attach'd. Any 
on»* desiring a location for * dim/ y.^dh will find 
this a goo- point. &uu .tod as it is in the heart of 
Cine of Uie llu -«t o \acco*growing dDtt i u of he 
btafe For any punictUare midrues , 1 . M LUCK, 
Hardyville. limi t county, Ky. mrio rodl 5 


HOARDING. 


1 >OARDlN<; -1 wo urge rooms, witu first- :ixa 
1 > table board, can be nod at bid Walnut 


A^lgrnfce’ft Sain «f Then. Fauhrettor 
Kntire Stxxek. cmbrauing the Largest 
and Most Complete As>orlmont of 
Russia Leather (inotls, Perfnnierj 
Mifeieat Instrumeuts Willow mid 
Wieker Work, .Hinhanirul Toys, 
Dolls, >♦* I ori put I ps. Wagon 8. Toiie 
Sets Hrie a-Hrac, KMilng Rods Ar- 
ehery. and Funcjr GouUh in endlesn 
variety, 

AT ATTCTION, 
pOMMENCflSG TUESDAY. Men u II, 1HM. at 
lb a. 4., at Nos. 432 and 434 Maikut »t.. be- 
luceti i-ourih and Fifth, and contiutilnrevrtr 
d-o until all u» v.Jd. 

LjjIi-* (innlomar 1 y lutiied. S-nit pri>«idcd 

Terras cash. 

FIbEUTY TRUST* SAFETY VAULTCO. c 
v i- Assignees. 

E. k. Mix.x.cn St Co., Auct rs. 


for sale—a t auction , 

saloon. 

r rilE *9>ck and uxtur a of the Hotel de Raine 
i > *toou, cor Second ami Main, will tw* sold at 
public auction l u* »da). Mareh II, at 9:30 a. « 


31 AILS 11AL’S SALES. 


j)*9 dlf 


HTEA3I BOATS. 


For ( Innnnntl—C. M. Mnll llnr «ieainere. 

r ^ ffrily at 2:12 P.M. Sundavs 

«oerx=a&a-«L.U 11:42 K. M. Pare fU. ll.Miiid 

trip 90 , including meals, bertha and iKuwage.g'Hxi 
untU tia^ Boats leave d<Mk at foot of Third sl 

UILLK It tv-*. » R %.\K t ill I ER. eap’L 

_ P—- am i Ticket Agent se22 dASutf 


REGULAR U. 8 MAIL LINE. 

For Owou*buro, Kvan*vilie and Henderson. 

FASHION . PENNY. Master, 

leave as above This Day, 
iaMaich 10, at 4 p. u 
__ _ B. C. LEM, Agent. 

Will 8. Hays, Ticket Agent. 

8 , W. Blacs. l’<u-eij(Crr Agent. 

REGULAR KENTUCKY RIVER PACKET. 
The elegant bteamer 

HORNET . FREEMAN, Master. 

leave for Frankfort and all 
■ ri ■ sd ii iM i way landings Toys Day. March lo.at 
4 p. m. tor Height or passage apply ou hoard or 
THOS. feXl ALU Ag’t. 


SOUTHERN TRANSPORTATION LINE, 
I^eaves E>ery Thursday. Saturday and Monday 
VOH NLW ORLE4\8 \\|# WAY POI.YTML 
THE FIXE PASSENGER STEAMER 

GUIDING ST2AR, 

IILGLhIt. Mjjster. MclNTYRE. Clerk. 
Leaver Moxoat. March 10 . at 10 a. m. The Paris C. 
Brown follows Friday. March 14. Forfrvigut 
10 . u 4 . LEVI. Agent. 

V% ILL S. IIAlu, Ffe and Ticket Ag t. 


TO-DAY’S ATCTIOV SALES. 

BY E. K. MILLER & CO 

Contents of the FourtliAve. If oust. No. 

Fourth au*., bet. Alain and Ma¬ 
ke!, Cou«istiit£or 160 Bed't ads and 
Cotton-lop Mattrewies, spring Hot- 
toms Hurenns W ard robes Carpets 
one Yerjr Cine Desk and Stove, 

AT AUCTION, 

M ONDAY. March 10 . 1HS4, at 10 A. u . we will 

-ell a* above. I*arti"a having lost their i - — -------- „ 

boU'Hhold goods by the flood, will do well to from, thr cro>s line *m-M wardljr ovt r tn# 
attend. iemiH cvish | residue of tbe tract, from lug 111 ft on 1 o 

_ E. K MILLER & CO.. Auctioneers. 

BY GEO. F. WOOD & CO. 

BOOTS, SHOES - AND BROGANS 

a r acc- r i o j<. 

MONDAY morning. March 10 , at 10 o'clock. 

Splendid assortment fre^lx. a>-asoua(>Ie 
good-* received since lasr tales, in hiding Hues of 
Bur custom work, Cincinnati make 
Ter iua casn. ARC HIE JOHNSON, Auct'r. 


PUBLIC SALES. 

First Annual Sals of tha Shelby County 
FINE HORSE ASSOCIATION, 

f Tfe» take place in therltvof Shelby till*. Ky , 
1 Monday, vpril ‘it. lSw|, composed of Paira 
Saddlers, Harness, aud Combined Saddlers and 
3la« e<. < arriage and Coupe Horse-ami Mares. 
Roadsters. Trotters. Fine-bred Stallions, etc. 
Thi-.se dvttiring to attend the sale from Eastern 
Kentucky can find conveyance nt ChrNtumshurg, 
8 miles from >helt»yviile. on the L., C. and L. R. 
R , arriving in Shelbyvill* m lime for the sale. 
Th*>se de-**irim: to attend from Louisville and 
points In Southern Kentucky can reach Suelhy- 
villr in time for the sale by train from Louisville. 
No by-bidding JOE SHIPMAN. Pres L 

tt . M. Owcx, Sec y. mr 8 ood21 


GGMSINATION SALE GF UGRSES 

At l,oni*Tille Fair (.rounds. 

TUESDAY, APRIL 29. 1884, 

C ONSISTING of young Trotting bred stallions 
J and Mare*. Hnrors* Horse* and Combined 
Horses. Parties sriah^H 
do so at the office of 

ESI 

Entries dose April i mr3 Mot 


HE t» __ , 

MEDD1S a SOin’HttTCK. 
by addresHiug R. W. CONN, Valley* .Station, 
tt'. HAKPi.s JL SON, Worthing to u, Ky. 


PROPOSALS. 


LETTING :No. 30. 

Notice to Contractors, 

S EALED PROPOSALS wdl be received at the 
Mayor's office until tt cine M.\v. March 12, 
1884. at 12 m.. for im* following work, viz: 

ShWbH.— For cootOiucUng a 15-iucU pijn- sewer 
in both sidewalk?* of oread way, from the fewer 
in Broadway at Tnird st . to tfie ra>t line of Fifth 
street. 

The above will be done accord mg to the plans, 
draw.n *. iiitil spocifications ou fUe in the City 
Engineer’s office. 

Bond with approved securltv and bid* on the 
blank forms furnished by tho City Engineer re* 
i|uir vj for thu worx. 

ludUi r» an 1 representatives of the press are 
invited tu attend he opeuing of the bid*. 

Property owners Interested in the above work 
sre requested to examine the bids, piaus and let¬ 
ting sheets. 

The city reserves th© right to reject any or all 
bins. CHARLES D. JACOB, Mayor. 

Matos* Or net, March 7, 1884. 


iWar.Hhar* Sale, 

George Kubbaueh against Alexander MoEwun. 
etc —|In Chancery, No. '.Vi, 186. 

1 > Y virtue <*f a judgment of the Louisville 
-reliant; Court, rendered in trie above 
cause, tite uudereigtiod will, on 

MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1884. 
about the hour of 11 o’cl«M?k a. h , sell at public 
Auction t.« the highest bidder, at ttie Court-house 
door, in the city ol Louisville, on a credit of 0, 
12 and *8 month*, thu follow lug-described prop- 
trtj, to-wit: 

Two certain tract* or parcels of land. Iring and 
bring in Dial part ol the city of Louisviilr. Jef¬ 
ferson count} . and btato of Kentucky. known 
Port land: 

l he first lot fronting on th© north side of Port¬ 
land ttvr. :I5 ft., nnd l imning buck uorthwaidly 
©.ime width and paralhd' to First cross sL (now 
called Thirty-first sftrerti. 198 tt. to a ;t;t-f. 
alley, the w*»*t dn • of lot adjoining what was 
ku wo as /orller's lir.’werT lot, now a tobacco 
factory, and tie ©ast line being275ft. west or 
MiSt*U inow culled lniny first atreetj. It t>eiug 
the * ime lot conveyed to t feorge aml.fiargarot 
hnfib uch by deed recoidrd in De«-d Book 148, 
|iuge 164. 

Ifte *r*v>nd fieginidug 24d ft vr«*t from th© 
soul nuest corner of tfie •* hole true conveyed by 
tne t • •inudiKiouer ill Cfinnc«TT to ifiendore 
bemvartx. on the norib line of Portland ave., 
running thence iiortltuaidly at right angles 
aero * tb« trict and tt<% nor: h line, and running 

.. . . u — we*.twardly ovi r tne wnoie 

rotiung 111 fu on i ortlnmi 
ute.. raking in me fire.wcry anil all tueappurte- 
i auces. bein j the $amo i*oar©y» d i» George and 
Margaret Kulibaucu by deeil recorded in Deed 
Hook So. 153. page TiTu. 

i-otfi lots being tfie hu in© property conveyed by 
niuintiffs, George and Margaret Kuhhauch, to 
Mnlcolm tfcEwen by deeil riKorded in Deed 
Look No. 197. page 3«8. and described tn the pe¬ 
tition in tin* action* 

It t© adjudged by th© court that nci’txer of said 
lots of ground can be diviued without materially 
impairing Its value. 

1 ue pure noser will he required to make a de- 
pto.il of $59 under rule of e«iuit 
Amount to b«* mlM*d ^4.2»»u 04. 

The purchaser will fie required to clve bond 
with good surety, bearing interest from dat* 
unril paid, aula fieri will be retained a« addi- 
Uomd security. tt*. H BAILEY. 

Marshal I^uisville uu.un.4ry c ourt. 


M iir>l»ai'?v >uie. 

A. D. North's Adm'r i 

m T. 


ag&iuss 

A. D. North’s Heirs. 1 

n Y virtu© of a judgment of the Louisville Chan* 
eery Court, rendered in the above cause, the 
undersigned will, ou 

MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1884. 
about th© hour of 11 o’clock a. m . sell, at public 
auction* to th© highest bidder, at the Court-house 
door, in the city of Louisville, ky , on a credit of 6. 
12 ami 18 months: 

A hou*~ and lot on the east side of Third st*. 
In the city of feminine, Kv . routing thereon 
100 feet, and bet. Chestnut and Broad way. and 
©xtending buck 200 :vet to an alley, on which 
Olivia M. North Ibed and died I will first offer 
the northern 45 feet of »a!d fid fronting on the 
east side of Third st. and tfi© same width bacw 
to the alley. I will then offer the southern 55 
feet thereof with tfie same width to said alley, 
and the improvements, i will then offer the 
whole lot of 1(M» feet front, back to the alley tfie 
same width with ihe Improvements, ami will ac¬ 
cept the bid or ulds leall/mg th© greatest 
amount. The -hare© of th© liifaut«. Laura J. 
Beach and Ella M. Beach, snail remain a lien 
tiirieon until they arrive at age or a slat 
guano in executes bond as required by section 
493 of the Code. 

The purchaser will be required to give bond 
with good surety, brarliur intercut from date 
tuiltl paid, aud a lien will be retained a* addition¬ 
al security. tt H. BAILEY, 

Marshal l*ouisviile < fiance y court. 


In Chancery. No. 830, V.C, 


FOR KENT—ROOMS. 


I 4 X>U RENT—Two targ© and elegant rooms, one 
I with a spA'.-iouik fire proof vault, and two 
Mixali connecting rooms, in tfie second story of 
tfi© Count aa-J ournal Building, all supplied witfi 
iieal sud gaa 1 firs# are the best and most de¬ 
sirable office rooms in tu* city. Apply at Cou- 
MiKaJot’JiXAL Counting Room. utf 

I/OR RENT-DESK UR OIT1CB KUOM-At 
I FIELD S Ticket Office, 342 tt est Main st.. 


urar Fourth. 


ja 5 dtf 


PERSONAL. 


f> ED-WETTING IN CHILDREN.-Tocur# them 

13 of f m 


this disagreeable habit 
onua’s Extract of Hocuu. 


use Ur. Winter- 


WnstiiVn *i^n " lo FUIla<l©lphla. 
"astiin^ton and Sen- \ork without Cheng© and 

cUiw. cfeoi!,/.? °J^ r North ’* ni l Eai.t©rn 
title©. Linclimatt Sfifepnr on 2 30 a m train 
ojan in depot at y p. M n 

J-Bor.onviU. Matl.on a.,.I Indiana?.. 

Its Railroad. r 

1 run by (.» nirul Mundard Tirae.l 


Lenve Lounrtil© 
J.©avn X* w 4 fi J(inv . 
Leave Jeff'-rsonviile 
Arrive .Seymotir 
Arrive Columbus 
Arriv© iuduvnariolis 
Arrive Chicago. 


Amu Buffalo. 
Arrive Boston 


1 No 5. | 


5:45 a m 


4: 50 a M 

.... 

5:55 A M 

.... 

7:30 a M 


8:10 A M 


0:45 a m 


9:52 p m* 


3:42 a Mi 


1 9:29 p m) 


No. 1 * 


• :*m a m 
7:91 a u 
8:05 a ii 
9:12 a u 
9:42 a M 
11-09 A X 

6:52 a u 
7*12 p u 


Lear© Louisville . 

Lgrave New .\luaur_[ ’ 

Leave Jefferson villa,..!!!! 

Army Seymour. . 

Arrive t.Vdumbus 
Amve snelbvvjle. .. .*** 
Arrive Rusnviiie.. 

Arrive < 'ambrulge citr.*l“' 

Arrive Innlanapohs ... 
Arrive Chicago 
Arrive st. Louis 

Aitiv© (iev©jamL.*** 

Arrive iiuffaio ..... "**" 
Arrive thm on ' 


J_ Xo .| No. 7. 


3:10 pm, 
2:50 p m 
3:29 p M 
4:50 pm 
3:35 p m 
6:42 p m 
7:31 pm 
8:30 p u 
7:00 P m 


6:42 a u 
12:42 p m 
4:49 a m 


7:15 p if 
7:09 r m 
7:24 p m 
M.'pi 
9:29 P M 


p 4 

o:47 a a 


Leave Indlir»apo|U_ ^ 

Arrive Jeffersonville 
Arrive New Aitotny 
Arrive LouisviM© 


I So- lu. I No. 4 


4:10 am 7:25 am 

T J5 am 11:15 a m 
7 H* A M| I2*:t5 A M 
« 23 4 Ml 11:25 1 I 


Leave In Ii m .|, 0 n. 

Arrive Jeffenv.nvilfe . 

Arrive New Albany I ; 

Arrive Lo uisvilfi. ... ** # ”l * 

Noe. I, rt. 7 and 19 run daily 
•xcept Sunday. 


No. 


3:50 © m 

^ .05 p m 
7::fii p » 

7:13 r u 


So. i. 

6:45 p 4 
10:3 »P I 
11 *.v; p m 
10:45 © ii 


All oinurs uu*!/ 


Train fea.ing l»ui««viile « t 7:r,r. u. has imU's 
sleeping earn to Ouc»go. Train I©win? %t 7C>\ 
l Y k% Nh*» ,r car an 1 i i*tt<-ii*-% to Ctiles -a - 
without change dally ©tcept Sun lar Dulkm 
nortiieasi corner Fourteen i^i «||J dam ,ta *** 

Chesapeake and Ithio ftnUwny, 

Only Liu# Running Solid Tivuua Between l^ouis. 

v lJI© aud tt'iumngton City. 

Depot, Water irrei. betwoen * »r>*t uid SecoaiL 
licset offluo^ .,49 IV. Mam .lU'rat 
New .standard 'Urn© 


KAST IIOUMD. 


Lv Louisville 

Ar Lexington . 

Ar hunihuran. 

A r Cli arias t on. 

Ar Afilarsoti . 

Ar While Milphur 

At Covington . 

Ar Clifton FoiK*. . 

AXtioilMll) . . 

ArS laiiuLoii, v*a.. 

Ar W'ayne«ooro ..... 

Ar Alton 

u tiariouesyitte, va ... 

Ar WasUingtoo . 

Ar Baltimore. 

Ar i’hiladeiimla. 

Ar New Yor* .‘ 

Lv t tianotte^vUie.] 

Ar tticmnuiid 

Af .'©wnort News. ..[.***, 
Ar i *l.i t' iiut ('oiufor;.. 

Ar Norfolk.* 

Lv Cliiton 1 org-. 

Lv Lexington. Va.' 

Lv Lyncuuurg . 

Li rills 

Lv (ireeustmro. 

Ar Louisville . 


hast Lin©.(Daily. ©*. 
Daily. J hunOuv. 


3:9U i* e 
9::Ci i* 

1 ;00 « a 

: :2. * a 4 

8:29, I, 
9:39 * si 
l :2-J a a | 
19:55 a m 
11:59 a ii I 
1 : 11 © si 
1:49 r s 
1:50 p m 
3:10 p u 
7-19 p u 
8:55 p m 
3.99 A y 
«>:39 a m 
3:19 p m 
0:39 f M 
19:15 a s 
19 45 A M 
UJiO A M 
11:19 AM 
3:19 pm | 
2:39 pm 
7:24 pm 
9:55 © m 
7 OOP Mi 


. 99 t g 
IJ Nt; A 4 
• iOU r ii 


5:15 © m 


oT*.‘ h M ,K,on K *‘‘ r V »'**•'* Louisville daily 
with l‘ulluian cars arj solid traiu lo WasliioEtoiL 
p t.. without «’fiangs*. At Winchester, at 
8:10 p m . I oilman cars from Clucln- 
nati are attached, running through lo iflcfi- 
uaon.J ' a,, ivitfiout dmnge, vn©re direct 
conneotkMi is mafi* witfi tticmnon l and Danville 
ami through train of the Atkiutic i 'oast Ur.e for 
th© Southeast and Jacks mi vilJ©, Ha. 

Connection in Union De|H»t. WanfifiTgion for 
Halil more, l a bi!a<t©J|ft>ia. S>w York and the Eahc 
P fiila leiphia passeugeni can remain iu »lecuer« 
unui 7 a. m. . ^ 

Chesapeake, Ohio and Southwestern ft, R. 


For Owensboro. Henderson, Paducah. Memphis 
and the South and Soum wofc. 

Ticket office. I4(t W Main st 1 >©jhK, cor. Four¬ 
teen lii and Main sta. 

Station*. 

| E press. 

1 Daily. 

r Aceom- 
jmo ladoa 

Leave Louisville. 

1 7:50 am 

~4:10pm 

Arrive I 'ecllfii. . 

llo.io A M 

6:45 p m 

Arrive LlixAbathtown. 

10:40 a m 

7:05 p m 

Arrive i)ra>s*m Springs. 

11:12 a m 


Arrive Owensboro. . 

5:05 p m 


Am'©Norttraville . 

3:J7 p m 


Arrive HopkitisviUe. 

7:50 ** u 


Arrive Mauisonvilie. 

4: 35 p m 


Arrive lienderoofi. 

6:10 P M 


Arrive Lvnn*rille. 

8:10 P m 


Arrive Paducah .. 

7:00 p m 


Arrive May fled . 

Arrive Fulton. 

8:27 © m 


9:29 » u 


Arrive Cairo . 

10:45 p m 


Arrive Memphis. 

3:20 a u 


Arr te Ixraitfvill*. 

7:90 p u 

9:35 A M 


•A mraodatlUQ runs daily except Sunday. 

Louisville, Te«© Alban*! and Chlen-t* R. K, 

"iion u iioxite " 

Depot. Corner roui teeoto and Main tta 
City ttexet office soutue sst cor. rhlrd and Main. 

No. L | No. X “ 
•Ex. Sun.j ti'ally. 


Lv Louisville .— 

7:49 a M 

7:39 p * 

Lv New Albany. 

8:00 a M 

7:59 p 4 

Ar MltcaeU. 

10:23 a M 

10.97 p 4 

Ax Lafayette. 

3:42 p m 

3:90 a < 

Ar Monoo.... 

4-53 p a 

4:07 A4 

AT Michigan city. 

7:15 p .* 


Ar Crncago. . 

8 : 25 © • 

*7:30 a 4 


No change t»f csrs n©tweeu i.ouisvlile and Chi¬ 
cago. Tfi© only lino running solid trains through 
to Chicago, i'uilinmi (Mtlace Bu.rett sleepere on 
night trsinv. Diagrams tor sleepers at city ticket 
ftice, southeast corner Third and Mam streets 


No. 2. i No. 4. 

|*Ex. Sun. ‘Dally. 

Lv Chicago .. 

7;4U a M 

V :45 p 4 

L.v .vilcingaa City. 

A -A 


Lv Mouuu . 

11:10 a M 

nkti r m 

Ar Latayctte. 

12:22 p m 

12:00 a m . 

Ar MUCueil. 

5:40 © j 

5:u0 a A 

Ar New Albany. 

8:15 © i 

7:15 a 4 

Ar Luuiaville . .. 

8:35 © u 

7:13 a 4 


'Daily ©xc**pt Sunday, tDaily. 

Union depot corner Polk street and Fourth Av¬ 
enue, Chicago. City ticket office No. 122 ltao* 
dolph street. 

9/IIO amt Mississippi Railway. 

(In euect 8uu iay. Decc-iuoer 2. 18SJ.» 

Arrive 
Cestui tn 


I Leave 

j l«4»Ui*ViUt | 


Arrive 
Louisville 

00 a m *12:95 © m • 


Cincinnati . t7:0O a m tl2:t>5 p m 1 hriK/pg 

Ciucmnati . 12:25 p n » 6:35 p m 4 12:35 p M 

mcmuaU.. |1.45 am; 7:95 am 11:40©s 

sl Louts. jb:20 a m 6:20 p m 9:.a/ a 4 

fct. Louis . |;:30pv 7:30 A w| n 5 pm 

]uviiana|K>lls *7:90 At 11:30 a t 8:99 p M 

Chicago.. f# :0U a * | 6.25 pvj 8:00 ©jf 

Traius marked I. daily. tDaily except Sunatr. 
This line make* two hour* tue qmcicest time 
berecea lg>ui»vllle and St. Louts w ith no change 
ol cars, nnd is the only line under one manage¬ 
ment between these two citicH. Parlor cars on 
day trains; Palace sleepers on nig/it trams. ThU 
Is the only route running a ihi ougn sleeping-car 
to New York naParkersburg, Washington. UaJ- 
tmi-ire and -philadclpuuk free parlor uare to 







































































































































































































































































4 


THE COURIER-JOURNAL: LOUISVILLE, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1884 


« 


C 0 uru r * 3 mini a l. 

MONDAY MORNING. MARCH 10. 84 


NEWSPAPER POSTAGE. 

Persons mailing transient copies of the 
Courier-Journal lo friends abroad must 
place (wo-cent stamps on all of our eight- 
column editions, and three-cent stamps on aU 
double numbers , or they uill be detained in the 
Louisville post-office. 


“BUSINESS.” 

Saturday, March 8.—'The wwk bns been 
decidedly unsatisfactory in rnauy business 
relations. The weather bat. been execrably 
bad, cold and stormy in northern latitudes 
and wet and slushy in the central and south¬ 
ern. It has interbred more or le*s seriously 
with business everywhere, and in the Ohio 
ralley the conditions have boeu such as to re¬ 
duce trade to minimum proportions. This 
has increased somewhat the depression of the 
business temper; and ibo commercial world 
is just now sadly in need of some such stim¬ 
ulus os would be famished by a cheerful 
opening of the spring raosou, with auspicious 
crop prospects. There has been more quie¬ 
tude in important branches of trade such as 
iron and textile fabrics. Mercantile failures 
for the first time in three or four weeks show 
an increase. The railroad situation, as re¬ 
spects fate*, is not more satisfactory, but, on 
the contrary, the continuance of irregulari- 
j ties in rate* constitutes an increasing prob¬ 
ability that cutting is irremediable 
under the present conditions of trade 
and the existing appliances of regulation. 
Advices as to the winter wheat crop have 
been rather favorable on the whole, but for 
the first time there are reports of serious 
damage in one or two localities in Kansas, 
Missouri, Illinois and Ohio. The flood of the 
lower Missi>sippi bos no significance in ro- 
spect to any crop. 

In Western markets the tendency in grain 
was In buyers' favor until yesterday. Tnero 
has been in some markets a good shipping 
demand for wiuter wheat, flour and corn, 
under the stimulus of low freight rates, ship¬ 
ments having been made from bt. Louis at 
14c to New Y^k. A corresponding break 
from its 80c rnto is imminent at Chicago, in 
anticipation of which there have been largo 
negotiations for flour and grain. In Western 
venters wheat closes higher than 

a week ago, corn is c higher, and oats 
blsher. live is steady and barley 
Higher. lu seaboard markets prices have 
fluctuated, but show no important changes. 
Winter wheat is evidently assuming a 
stronger position, and is stiffening undvr the 
influence of legitimate demand. In New 
York there is a rumor current that No. 52 
red winter is to be cornered. Receipts of 
grain have been moderate at most points, 
but are latterly increasing. Exports mod¬ 
erate. Advices from 1.200 points in the 
corn States are to the effect that the stock m 
cribs has decreased from 8,500,000 to 6,500,- 
000 bushels in five weeks. Provisions have 
been Irregular, declining slightly early in the 
week, alterward ndvaneing, and closing a 
trifle lower man a week ago. Hogs hove ad¬ 
vanced 10(u"5c in the West, and cattle have 
declined lOc/2Uc. Cotton has ruled steady 
in the spot department, but futures are a 
trifle lower. 

The iron markets are dull, and pig is 
rather favorable to buyers. The dry-goods 
trade uai been quiet. Wwol is firm. Coffees 
i are without; important changes, the option 
market In New York being steady at a de¬ 
cline of 5 uf 10 point*. Koflned sugars are 
Kyi Jfc higher in New York. The New Or¬ 
leans »ugnr market is firm. Petroleum has 
been Irregular and panicky. Pipe-line cer¬ 
tificate* declined Sc, causing a number of 
failures in the Pennsylvania gambling ex¬ 
changes, but at tho closo the price has re¬ 
covered half the difference kwt. Leaf to¬ 
bacco has been firm. Whisky has 
been steady. Tlie quinine boom wu» 
broken as suddenly as it was formed 
by free sales from tuo stock of Power* & 
Weigiittnan, wui -n brought the pricodown 
about 50c per ounce tp lUu starting point of 
the rise. 

In New York money has been easy. The 
banks have lost heavily in gold, and the re¬ 
serve resources have been reduced $7,000,- 
000 in round numbers. Exchange on Now 
York has declined to par at St. LouL, in 
consequence of large gram shipments and a 
loyal pressure for currency, but at most 
Western points it has ruled about steady. 
Foreign exebungo has ruled firm, but the 
rising tendency has been checked by largo 
shipmentsof gold. The banks still bold on 
seavrvo $32,000,000 more than a year ago, 
of which * 20 , 000,000 gold and $12,000,000 
legal-tender notes. Government 4 and 4)* 
per cent, bond* have declined a trifle, but 
other issues are steady. Block speculation 
has been brisk at times in certain specialties 
under manipulation, but in the general list it 
has been tame and flabby. Changes in prices 
are unimportant. 

Foreign advices have been of no special 
significance. _ 

SMALL OBJECTIONS. 

One of llie most surprising objections 
that could be made against the Exposition 
is that it is too big a thing lor Louisville 
to have. The other objection to which 
Col. Young referred in his Interview yes¬ 
terday, that it brought down on some of 
our householders crowds of visiting kin. 
can bo accounted for, because there are 
mean people even in Kentucky, the land 
of long-proclaimed hospitality. All Ken- 
tuckiaus like to baugout their latch-string, 
but there Usomc ground for suspicion that 
some of them do not like it pulled. 

But how anybody identified with Lou 
isvillc, with his life, hi* fortune and his 
sacred intelligence wrapped up iu the 
destiny of our city, can any that a thing wc 
have had and can have uud which makes 
us better known to the world than any 
event iu our history, is too big a thing for 
us, gives comprehension the go-by. The 
man who says that certainly makes a most 
humble application of the warning of the 
sin of the angels, and tliugs away ail am¬ 
bition. He has not aspiration enough 
even to be a cross-road# politician, and is 
not even fit .Tor treason, stratagems and 
spoils. The only suitable habitation for 
such a man is some deserted village, and 
the sooner he sleeps with the rude 
forefathers of the hamlet the better it will 
l>e for the village. If a man has such bu 
inanity as this he should have the modest 
* stillness that ought to accompany it. 
There are men iu Louis villa who said in 
tha beginning that the Southern Exposi¬ 
tion was too big for Louisville; they said 
it on the first day, when they saw the 
towu turn itself out iu its gala dress when 
the President of the United States formnl- 
0 ly opened Op; Exposition; the said it. be¬ 
cause they said il in tbu beginning, when 
they saw crowds of strangers week after 
week thronging our hotels and business 
places; they still shook their heads nod 
said it when thirty thousand people gath¬ 
ered in one space to witness the closing 
exercises. They say It now because they 
always said it. They have Use nir of hu¬ 
mility, but it is simply the self-pride of 
opinion that apes humility. 

When Col. Young said the other night 
at tho meeting that lie determined to lake a 
t lub and kill the first man who threw up to 
him an old grievance, he indulged in a fig¬ 


ure of speech that might profitably be pul 
luto practice. If these grievances could 
be listed in print, it would be the most ab¬ 
surd string of woes ever presented to the 
public. The man with a grievance is uot 
the most agreeable compaulon, even il ho 
have a real grievance. Tlie most ridicu¬ 
lous thing in human experience is the man 
who counts one in a million who com¬ 
plains that the rest of the crowd do 
not trent him with distinguished 
consideration. It is safe to say that there 
was not a grievance now nursed by a Lou¬ 
isville man that was not the inevitable con¬ 
sequence of the magnitude of the South¬ 
ern Exposition. One man claims (hat. en¬ 
tering the gate with 750,000 others, the 
turnstile took occasion to creak on his 
passage. Another, being one of 1,400 ex¬ 
hibitors, complains that he did not get ten 
times as many exhibitor’s tickets ns any 
one else. Another thinks it all right to 
have entertained the press, but thinks that 
he, out of 1.722 stockholders, should have 
been selected as the ideal stockholder to 
have done the entertaining. Another 
ihiuks that the judges of awards should 
have bceu selected with rigid im¬ 
partiality, but with an eye to giviug 
him all the medals be could possibly 
wont. It is true there is a Power that 
numbers the hairs of our bead aud notes 
the falling of the sparrow; but sensible 
men know that in the human Imndliug of 
many things and many persons with equal 
rights and entitled to equal consideration 
all must be treated alike, and that among 
such numbers the only way to do justice 
to ail is to show favors to none. 

The man who thiuks the Exposition too 
big for Louisville, and (he man with an 
Exposition grievnnee, make a flue team. 
One eats dirt, the other is a kicker. It 
would not be a bud thing if between the 
humble pic and the kicking they could 
mutually annihilate each other. 

BALD ROBBERY. 

Every man in the United States who 
wears clothes aud pays for them should 
read this: 

The New York Times publishes a com¬ 
parison of the iliffeftmce iu the prices in 
New York and Loudon of men's clothing, 
which uo fair-minded reader can consider 
without acknowledging the injustice of 
the outrageous svslcrn that makes such a 
difference possible. 

For instance, a bn tad-cloth drc*e-«ast wluch 
easts$50 in JSttc York costs only $22 in Ixm- 
don. 

A hat tyy business suit which <y*sfs $30 *n 
JYcic York, amts bot $13 in ls)ndoti. 

•4 spring serge or rcoat which e»stfi $20 in 
Mew York, cunt* Out $8 50 in London, 

.4 winU r be tter or reoat which costs $85 in 
Mae York, costs but $14 50 in London, 

A silk hat which costs $5 in A lew York, 
costs but $3 in London, • 

'These articles altogether cost in Sc id York 
$140. In fetndon they cod but $61. Th< 
man who buys these clothes, therefore, in 
Seu> York jtaytt $70 More for them than he 
could boy them far in bunion. 

What cuu*es this difference iu the prices 
of the two cities? 

Our turtiT. 

No oue will dispute llwf. with the tariff 
removed, the same goods could be pur 
chased as cheaply in New York as iu 
London, ut least as cheaply plus the freight 
rates between the two cities. 

The man who pays, therefore, $140 for 
clothes in New* York, really *buys $61 
worth of clothes, on which he pays $7D 
tuxes. 

And where do these taxes go? 

If the good* are manufactured in this 
country, not one cent reaches the Treas¬ 
ury. it is simply $70 taken by law from 
the man tlmt buy* $61 worth of clothes, 
and given to the man who grows wool and 
the nmn who makes cloth. 

If the good* are manufactured abroad, 
$79 goes to a Treasury which does uot 
need it aud w hich can raise all the revenue 
it required on whisky, tobacco aud article* 
of luxury. 

Iu either case tho purchaser of the 
clothes gets absolutely nothing for the $79 
of the $140 which he spends. 

If on buylug thb clothes he had to pay 
$61 to the clothier, and $79 directly to a 
tax-collector, how long would he stand 
such extortion? 

Iu result there is not a particle of differ¬ 
ence between that system and the present 
tariff system, according to which he is thus 
unnecessarily and exorbitantly taxed, not 
only on his clothing, but on nearly every 
other necessity of life. 

How long will the people of a country 
which claims to bo free submit to this le¬ 
galized robber)'. which those who uphold 
it, and grow fat upon it, are pleased to cull 
a “Protective" tariff? 

THE WHISKY SITUATION. 

The vote iu the House ot Representa¬ 
tives on the motion to take up the Bond 
Extension Bill was certainly nuvthing else 
but encouraging to the advocates ol that 
bill, though the vote was uot conclusive of 
its ultimate fate. The vote was a small 
one. being 83 less tbuu a full House, in¬ 
cluding pairs, and at the same lime there 
were no affirmative votes except from 
friends of the bill, while there were prob- 
ably ioine ffegulive votes cast against giv¬ 
ing the bill precedence over an appropria¬ 
tion bill, without regard to Its merits. 
These considerations suggest tlmt there is 
yot a chance of success, but it can not be 
denied that a demonstration in force, to 
use a military phrase, has been made, und 
that a discouraging check has bceu en¬ 
countered. 

It may be in order nt once for the large 
holders of whisky to concert a co-opera¬ 
tive plau for the export of their stock to 
Bermuda. It is likely that, by concentrat¬ 
ing goods under one association iu large 
quantity, exceedingly low' contracts enu lie 
made on through bill* of lading to Ber¬ 
muda. Railroad freights are very irregu¬ 
lar and low, grain having been taken this 
week at 14c from St. Louis to New York, 
and probably to Liverpool on a through 
rate of 20 c. It i* possible that advantage 
can be taken of the freight market to move 
out whisky on terms almost as advantage¬ 
ous as are offered dealers in the seaboard 
cities. Goods exported and reimported 
will aVolri the 4t per cent, interest on the 
deferred tux, and will have the benefit of 
regnuge on reimportation—Items which 
will perini |>8 overpay the charges of trans¬ 
portation and foreign storage. The Inter¬ 
est on the deferred tax for two years will 
be $3 25 per barrel, and the saving on the 
regnuge aliout $2 per barrel. The pig¬ 
headed policy of Congress iu making nec¬ 
essary the large aggregate expeuses of such 
operations, for the lwnefit of foreign ship¬ 
owners aud warehouses, is certainly to 
be condemned, but any honest plan of 
defense is admissible to a trade liable for 


$20,000,000 of taxes this year on property 
which they must hold two years longer 
before selling. 

American newspapers have almost 
without exception discussed the Queen's 
book in a tone of amusement and satire, 
but tlie English press have been much 
more severe on this absurd effusion. The 
Courier-Journal has chosen to treat this 
subject with the ridicule which it deserves, 
but it lias never, as has been charged, in¬ 
sinuated aught against the good name of 
Victoria. The English press, however, 
arc not so just in this respect fcs the 
Philadelphia Fires says; 

•‘7 be Englishman has hedged his ruler about 
with such divinity that nothing short of a scan¬ 
dalous passion can account to him for the com¬ 
monplace selfishness and foolishness which she 
has hero displayed. The English press are in¬ 
dignant that she does not rise to thi* height of 
great political crls-s; that the throws au new 
light on the great historical epochs of her reign; 
that the whole of one important campaign sig¬ 
nified to her only the death of the Prince Impe¬ 
rial, and another the safety of her own son; that 
with the crown of a great empire on her h^ad 
she bobbles of pleasant little drive* in the hills, 
of tlie furniture In her chambers, and. nlmve all, 
of the good qualities of a Highland gillie. 
Majesty is invented in their eyes with such a 
dazzling glamour that they feel an angry con¬ 
tempt for the Queen, ’who prates,' says the 
Pall Hall Gazette, ‘as if she had the habit* and 
tastes of a country 'squire's wife.* ** 

In truth, ns bus been remarked, she is 
just such a woman. She is bourgeois, 
with the gross appetites of the house of 
Hanover, “nil of whom loved a hearty 
meal washed down by liquor,” while she 
has the Stuarts’ “enuoy thrift'’ and de¬ 
light in accumulating money, with 
George III.'s taste for vulgar soc iety and 
stubborn pig-headed ness, added to which 
is undoubtedly a touch of meutol disinte¬ 
gration. * 

Our Cubun neighbor* are sufferin': from 
a commercial crisis which results from 
heavy taxation, an uosotind currency and 
a sluggish market for sugar. Cuban na¬ 
tional finances are nt odds and ends, aud 
as the proportion of gold and paper cur¬ 
rency Is nearly equal to the worst ex¬ 
periences of our own during the late war, 
it is not wonderful that private finances are 
also deranged. There has Inreu great delay 
in selling sugar in Culm, a* well as in Louis¬ 
iana. as the prospect of lower duties ha* 
reduced buying limits, while holder* have 
preferred to take the chances of legisla¬ 
tion rather than sacrifice their property. 
Several heavy failure* are reported in 
Cuba. und great distrust pre¬ 
vails. Our Cauudiun neighbors are 
reporting just now tlm heaviest 
run of failures ever known iu the Domin¬ 
ion; and American bankers arc pursuing a 
very guarded policy In dealing* with that 
country. Mexico has had her nickel panic; 
and the pigtail*, determined not to be out¬ 
done by Christendom, have inaugurated a 
fairrized commercial panic in several of the 
opeu provinces of Chino. After making 
this survey among the smaller nnlious sur¬ 
rounding us, it is pertiuent to add that 
conunercinl aud financial affair* iu ull the 
great nations are in a normal und appur- 
cutty substantial position, though in no 
country is there auv evidence of unusual 
prosperity. 

Posson Ju Cook, will* whose move¬ 
ments and deliverances the Courier- 
Journal energetically trie* to keep It* 
readers familiar, ha* evidently been pu¬ 
gilist really affected liy the atmosphere of 
Boston. Possou .To recently wcut to 
Keene, N. IL. to deliver a lecture, and 
while there the Rev. Mr. Price asked him 
to put iu a few spare moments by drop¬ 
ping mto prayer- meeting nud delivering n 
prayer, which Possoo Jo consented to do. 
But when Mr. Price called for Posson Jo 
he found him in a siesta, on awaking 
fr*»m which Pinson Jo was so enraged 
that Mr. Price say* the Posson called him 
a “nuisance” and a “barbarian;" that the 
Posson “looked and acted like u crazy 
man." und that he sprang upon him 
(Prick) and would have thrown him down 
stairs “hud I not been his superior in 
physical strength aud prevented it." Pos- 
aon Jo is evidently getting jealous ot Bos¬ 
ton’s most distinguished citizen, Mr. John 
Sullivan, or of Ohio’s muscular Chris¬ 
tian. Posson O’Bo vlaN. 

^ -- -■ .-—— T 

Dr. N. T. McTeagce, of Corning. 
Ohio, a devout member of Father O’Boy- 
l*n's church, has written a statement in 
dorsing »* trut ihe remarkable charges of 
McDBVfTT against the belligerent Father 
O’Boylan. On the Sunday preceding the 
day on which McDevitt was kukluxed, Dr. 
McTk \GUE sn ys that “after having denounc¬ 
ed McDevitt in the most violent term*, aud 
usking God to curse him and all those who 
would have anything to do with him. he 
[O’Boylan] came down from the pulpit, 
locked tlie door, aud began to orgauize his 
mob. There was a committee appointed 
to attend to the business. He would not 
allow McDfcvrrr’s letter to bo read, saying 
it was not fit to bo read. Han nig an, tho 
leader of the mob, said: “I’ll shoot him 
full of boles. I’ll riddle him with bul¬ 
lets.’' O’Boylan said: 4, 1 11 lead ye! I'll 
lead ye! If any one’s shot I’ll be first." 

Father O’Boylan, the priest who stirred 
up the Ku Klux to expel McDevitt from 
Corning, Ohio, has written a card, in which 
he shows that he is at home in the usu of 
htulwart English. He accuses McDevitt 
of telling “an infernal lie," aud call* him 
“a cowardly assasriu, a hypocrite, au aping 
infidel and villain" and “a miserable 
sneak," concluding with the solemn decla¬ 
ration to the people of Ohio that “I see no 
law to protect any man down here," la 
which statement the Ku Kluxed McDevitt 
will doubtless heartily join. 

Bismvrck’s organ, the Tagthhitf. gars 
Minister Barg ant ran not remain in Ber¬ 
lin w ithout affecting the relutious of Ger¬ 
many and America. The attention of 
Bismarck's organ, tho Tageblatt, is culled 
to the fuel that America doesn't care a 
pretzel how soon the relations may be 
•‘uffected" between itself nnd that part of 
Germany represented by Bismarck’s or¬ 
gan, the Rig Tagblatant, 

Tiie Mayor of Danville was one of Mr. 
Bukhman'* w itnesses in the “outrage ” iu- 
v*?atigntioD. The Mayor of Danville test!- 
lied that lie “got the drop" on a Democratic 
Magistrate ami shot him dead. The Mayor 
of Danville being a Readjusicr, of course 
this little incident “doesn’t count." 

Winter seems to have a strong liking 
fortkclup of Spring this year. Indeed, 
the hoary old roy&terer couldn't freeze to 
the coy damsel more resolutely if he were 
Gov. Crittenden nnd Spring were Patti. 

Bismarck sausages are the latest things 
from the butchers. The name Is an unde¬ 
served slur on the canine race. 


PEOPLE WE KNOW. 

Mr. Beecher denus the report that he 
is to go to England on a lecturing tour. 

Gen. Grant bns laid aside his crutches 
and dispensed with a doctor'* attentions. He 


a Presidential campaign. Sneak away from 
that position nnd you concede that the Re¬ 
publican tariff you hare so often denounced 
n« honey-combed with abuses is, after all, 
meritorious and unassailable. 


MR. II 1 Lilt R F. R RO WISER 


[ITnfien for the Courier- Journal .] 

BACHELOR CRITIC. 


Hour With the Bluff Critic of the Great 
Americas Publishing Home. 


walks with a caue and drives out often. 

Jay Gould will return from bis South¬ 
ern trip by way of St. LouU, and attend tbe 
annual meeting of the Missouri Pacific March 
11 . 

The New York Times alleged author 
of the “Bread Winners,'’ Thomas Hunter, a 
New Yqrk school teacher, deuics the allega¬ 
tion. 

Senator Fair, of Nevada, is having his 
son educated as a raining and civil engineer, 
and is having him prepared (or tho Harvard 
School of Science. 

The Boston library eau bnppily nfford 
luxuries. It has just paid $1,400 in London 
for a bioind volume of 10 autograph letters 
from Byron to bis mother. 

“I am never in to newspaper men." is 
the message which, according to the Boston 
Glotw, Mr. Edwin Booth recently sent by his 
servant to a waiting reporter. 

The emiueut violinist, Joseph Joachim, 
is said to have changed bis mind, aud will 
not come to this country next winter. Let 
us hope that be will change it back again. 

It is current gossip at the capital that 
President Arthur can hum correctly two 
bars of tbe air, “Over tbe Garden Wall. " 
There is a good deal of hum m President 
Arthur. 

The Hon. James Russell Lowell, our 
Miuuter to England, was the first of tbe 
foreign Minister* to receive a copy of the 
Queen’* book from tbo band of her Private 
Secretary. 

Dn. Wendell Holmes, now seventy* 
five, goes over to Cambridge once a month 
and charius the medical students with bis 
chat about college men and days. He is still- 
sprightly, aud wears well his advunclug 
year*. 

Mu. H. B. Clawson, (he Scandinavian 
Mormon, who ba* had four wives—three of 
them living—aud twenty-eight children, 
should be invited to come lia^t and lecture 
on “How it Feels to be Colonel of Your Own 
Regiment." 

W. II MalloCK offers himself as a 
Tory candidate for Parliament for the St. 
Andrews borough in Scotland. But the 
Scotch may possibly toink some otuer 
qualifications arc necessary than tuo ability 
to write “L Life Worth Living?" 

Dh. Sciileiman ami his w ife, with the 
necessary worktncu, have gone to Marathon 
to examine a tumulus in tho midst of the 
plaiu, which be thinks contains a cenotaph, 
that K a monument not containing bodies, 
La: raiM* l to the memory of the lallcn. 

The Vanderbilt homestead on Staten 
Island has been used for several years as a 
beer garden. W. H. Vanderbilt bus just 
given notice to the tenant that the lease will 
not be renewed. It is raid that ou the site 
will be built a largo charitable institute a* a 
memorial to Commodore Vanderbilt. 

A Parisian recently exclaimed regard¬ 
ing Geu. Gordon: “A people which, amid 
general skepticism and ralfi*hues*, produces 
such citizens, has more power than a large 
standing army could confer. It would, in¬ 
deed. be to despair of humanity not to bo 
certain of England's defeating ttaoMnbdi." 

Wilkie Collin* recently strayed into 
a London theater where “The Now Mag¬ 
dalen" was boiug played. The ushers 
whispered the fact among the audience, and 
there was an ununiuious call foV “tho 
author," which only ceased w hen tbe famous 
noveicst appeared ou tho stage, blushing and 
bowing. 

The Rev. John Snyder, of St. Louis, 
the gentleman who Interviewed Mr. Conk- 
ling w hile he was eating, has refused several 
offers from newspapers desiring him to act 
as special Western and Southwestern corre¬ 
spondent, covering tho territory formerly 
looked after by Joe Mullmttan. the Beaming 
Ananias of tbe Sage-brudi District. 

Josa H art, the Morey-leller man, says 
a New York letter, i* in a bad way. Two 
weeks ago bis evening paper, the />Ao, sus¬ 
pended from sheer drouth, and there is not 
the slightest earthly excuse for printing bis 
morning paper, JYuth, since A. Onkey Hall 
left it. Hart ha* liitlo left sav© bis r©nuta¬ 
tion, which a jury recently valued at $60. 

The late James Stokes’ estate is valued 
at $6,000,000. The reason that Mrs. Henry 
Dale, bis daughter,U trying to break tho will 
is that she B named in the document as one 
who shall receive a lifo Interest only in the 
estate. Tho case is being argued before Sur¬ 
rogate Rollins in Now York, and Mr. Evarts 
i* the senior counsel for tbe testator's son©, 
who seek to uphold the will. 


ABOUT WOMEN. 

Mmf. Modjeska supports at her own 
expense a school for Polish children m New 
York. 

The petite Countess, of Lcwenbampt is 
one of the prettiest women in tbe foreign 
circle in Washington. She i* a typical 
Swedish beauty, with goldeu hair, blue eyes 
and fair white skin. 

Miss Ski ma Boro, the Finnish scientist, 
lecturer and historian, claims that the story 
of “Hiawatha," written by Longfellow, is 
1>o4cd on an old Finnish mythological folk¬ 
song, adapted to Hie Indian. 

When a delegation of Woman Snf- 
fragistt visited the White Hoii»c‘, and 8u«an 
B. Anthony sai I to tbe President, “Ought 
not women," he stopped b*r short “and 
smiling put the questiou by." Ho is to be 
excused if be thought it was a leap-year pro¬ 
posal. 

One of the female lecturers before the 
Woman f s Suffrage Convention delivered a 
lecture on “Woman Before the Law." The 
lectures* is right. Woman was before the 
law. It is snfo to say that if there had been 
no woman in tho Garden of Eden there 
would have been no need of law. 

The condition of woman in India is yet 
susceptible of great improvement. Female 
education is almost neglected, lu Madras 
and Bombay tlie proportion of females under 
instruction to the total femalo population U 
about one in 400; iu Bengal it is one in 976, 
and in the northern provinces it is one in 
2.169. 

Since Queen Victoria ascended the 
throne Mie has received an auuual allowance 
of LRH5.0U0 for her expense*, but of this 
nmouut no le*s than £131,200 is absorbed in 
the salaries paid to the fortunate people 
whoM duty it is to aid in spending her 
Majesty’* handsome income. Sometimes 
the British people feel a ripple of indignation 
when they reflect that such an Immense sum 
is swallowed up annually by a horde of 
titled drone*, who, in reality, do nothing to 
earn tbo salaries which tbe 3 * draw with such 
regularity. 

31 us. Langtry is deliciously conscien¬ 
tious. On Ash Wednesday *bo refused to 
give an Ash Wednesday matinee, because she 
desired to go to church and bo real good. 
In tho suit which tbe manager of tbe New 
l ark Theater brought for damages, ho says 
that it was proper enough to prefer the wor¬ 
ship of God to playing in a theater on a holy 
day; but as she spent Ash Wednesday af¬ 
ternoon at a minstrel performance in Nlblo’s 
Garden, he want* $1,000 damages. 

Morilorluu* nnd t uanollabl«. 

UVtir Tori: £fur.J 

The Morrison bill take* ground on which 
the Democrat* con go before the country in 


At a hr* a Manly Reply to the < harj«» of Mr. 

Hugh Barrlay. 

[To the Editor of the Courier-Journal.] 

St. Augustine, Fla., March 4.—For 
nearly a month post I have been absent from 
my homo in Russeilviilo, Ky., spending 
much of tbe time hunting and fbhing with 
Home friends m tbe remote solitudes of 
Floriaa, 400 miles south of this antique city, 
and so far removed from the confines of 
civilization that even the cosmopolitan Cou¬ 
rier Journal was never seen. My State 
pride wa* very painfully wounded when in¬ 
quiry revealed the fact that not, one of the 
Seminole Indians had ever hcnnl of it. For 
tne first time in my life 1 recoguized the wis¬ 
dom and utility of the muaionary system of 
enlightenment, and wa* greatly rejoiced 
at meeting the evangelists, Dan. O’Sullivan 
nnd Ben. Barnard, chaperoned by Dick 
Lacey, on their way down to the overglades 
a* advance agents * of the Coukier-JoUr- 
NAL'e scheme to introduce the “Tariff-fur- 
revenue-only’’pl&u ot salvation among the 
benighted de*c«ndant* of Onceola. Return¬ 
ing here Saturday, my first employ rnent wo* 
to rc:ui all the b:tck numbers of theO)URI»R- 
*J ii'i'.NaL, whlc.j nn energetic newsagent 
over at Jacksonville bad kindly kept for me 
at the price of ten cenl^ a copy, and in this 
way I have just acquain.ed myself w ith tne 
sensational narrative of Mr. Hugh Barclay. 
Jr., publihbed in the issue of Feb. 22 a* part 
of the proceedings of the Legislative 
committor? having in rh&rge tbe 
investigation of tbe Anchorage asylum, 

It is iniposstbie for mo to faluom the pur¬ 
pose, or comprehend the meaning, if auy. of 
hi* unprovoked, unexpected, unnecessary*as- 
raidt upon rm»; on l equally difficult for me 
to understand by what nils of procedure, or 
pari lament or v ’precedent, the members of 
that committee will attempt to justify a 
method of inquisition so loivisu to the pur- 
po*e of their nppointinent, *o offensive to the 
spirit of tho law* under which they are pre¬ 
sumed to be acting, aud so unfair, unju*t 
and cruel in ite bearings upon private citi¬ 
zen*. Without any conceivable excuse or 
reason, in the face of every established prin¬ 
ciple of legislative jurisdiction, In open 
contempt of law, murals and con¬ 
science, the?© official guardians of public 
virtue aro posing before the (icopld as Lho 
abettors, if not the instigators, of private 
scandal. At ln&st one-half of Mr. Barclay’s 
romance Is irrelevant, redundant, Incom¬ 
petent as evidence concerning tne asylum 
management, mere spark* struck from the 
anvil of hi* distempered fakey, shedding no 
light upou the subject of. investigation, but 
directing the gaze of tbo idle and the malev¬ 
olent toward the private lives of men and 
women of tho State, whose mi sullied reputa¬ 
tions Mr. Barclay V vagaries can nev -r soil— 
not even with the aid and co-operation of 
thi* *w.jrti commission. Vv hat right 
bad this committee to inquire into 
bis supposed personal grievance* against 
mef What business have these 
gentlemen, appointed tv) ascertain and re¬ 
port tbe facte connected witu the govern¬ 
ment of one of tho ele-unorinary institutions 
ot the Slate, to consent to, if uot encourage, 
the production and record and publication of 
testimony, not won remotely germane to 
the .subject, but tbe only poaribl© effect of 
which i* to tradtica and defame people who 
are not parties to the proceeding and to 
whom no opportunity has been given to ap- 
peur and protect themselves against tbe a*- 
raultfc of the mistaken or the malicious ac¬ 
cuser! If thi* portion of the committee's 
work is a specimen of the value ot the w hole, 
its report will be about as authentic a 
contribution to the history of Kentucky 
a* the travesties or Beckett are to tbe juris¬ 
prudence of England, or the magnificent 
hyperbole* of Munchausen are to tbe litera¬ 
ture of travel. In view of Mr. Bat clay’s 
unfortunate mental condition, his statements 
excite in me no emotion* of auger, aud noth¬ 
ing remains for me to do but to enter, a* I 
now do, an unqualified denial of all his evi¬ 
dence res)*ctU 4 ’ the aileged loan of $100 to 
Mr. W. W. Lyles, in consideration of In* 
>ui rendering to me certain papers belonging 
to Mr. Barclay, which 1 desired to suppress. 
Tho story is utterly without foundation. 
There is not the smallest sornblauce of truth 
in any part of it. In conception, form, ut¬ 
terance and substance it is, so far as 1 am 
concerned, one unbroken senes of inven¬ 
tions— a pure fabrication from beginning to 
end, unsupported by one solitary fact, luci- 
dent or circumstaucc. No euch loan wa*ever 
made to Mr. Lyles by me. as an officer of the 
bank, as an individual, or otherwise, nor by 
any one else, so far as I know, or have rea- i 
son to believe. Mr. Lyles never at any time 
mentioned to me the existence of auy such 
paper or document, nor aid ho ever at any 
time express directly or indirectly, auy de¬ 
sire to borrow or otherwira obtain any 
money from me in any capacity in connec¬ 
tion with any paper or document, tbe pub¬ 
lication of which would have been “damag¬ 
ing" to my character. Tha whole story u 
a gratuitous fiction—which may account for 
t he committee s anxiety to hoar it. 1 will in¬ 
dulge in no har>h characterization of Mr. 
Barclay’* causeless arraignment ot my char¬ 
acter. To do so would be neither manly nor 
ju.>t, for such conduct on bt« part, examined 
m the light of tuy intimate association w ith 
him for many years prior to his confinement 
In the o&yiuiu at Anchorage, can only be ex¬ 
plained upon one of two hy potbeW—either 
that he i* of sound mind and destitute of all 
honor, or that he i* tho haples* victim of “a 
mind di>?&sed," and devoid of all moral ac¬ 
countability. I trust that It may never bo 
my misfortune to accept rhe former theory 
as tho true solution of a career which ha* 
“shed disastrous twilight" on so many 
hearts, and filing iu hateful «hadow upon so 
many nomes. Wilbur F. Bkowukh. 

A llappy Young Editor. 

[Franklin {Ga .) .Vetca.j 

Lost Sunday was our eighteenth birthday, 
aud in a few weeks the Xrws will enter upon 
the ninth vear of its existence; so, therefore, 
we are a little more than twice a« old as tho 
A err*. Little did we think eight years ago, 
wheu we bad never attended school a day, 
Hint in our eighteenth year we would aspire 
to tbo editorial of the paper that we so 
near in the past delighted to bear our father 
read, being mcapable to read it ourself. 

A < onvenlrnt Solution. 

[Ph.ladelvkia CaU,] 

“See here, my friend, that dog of yours 
killed three sheep of mine la*t night, and 1 
want to Know what you propose to do about 

it!" 

“Are \mu sure it was my dogl" 

“Yes.'* 

“Well, I hardly know what to do. I guess 

I had better .sell him. You don't want to 
buy a good dog, do you?" 

A t'hnnc • fur Hlanisrck. 

1 f.Vric York Commercial Advr-User.] 

An “International Dog Hliow” is w hat the 
people ol Cincinnati propose to call Chair 
com lug big bow-wow. Had it l»een an in- 
termtiional bog show, wejiav# an idea who 
would have made a good presiding officer. 

Do You Hrnr Hi «, Girls. 


ART AND WOMEN. 


The ideas of bachelors seem to have special 
weight, and we confess to having a certain 
reverence for those unmarried w’omen called 
“old maids." An uninspired writer tells us 
that, ouco upon a time, a man applied for a 
*oa*on ticket to Saint Peter at tho “Gates 
Ajar. “ and could not produce satisfactory 
credentials of having been through Purgato¬ 
ry. Another f»arty applied, who confessed 
that ho had not been purged of sin in the 
proper way, but, he remarkt.-d, “I Lave 
l»een married." Tbo Saint-kei-per at once 
threw the gate open, saying with a bow and 
smile of sympathy, “That is just the same; 
so hove I." The aggrieved party outside 
exclaimed, “Why, I have been married 
twice!" “Then go to Hade*," said St. Pe¬ 
ter, “for Paradise is no place for fools." 

The world seems in sympathy with the 
celestial custodian on this lino, and “The 
Reveries of a Bachelor," by Ike Marvel, or 
Donald G. Mitchell, “Tho Bachelor of tbe 
Albany," and “Bachelor Bluff," all bril¬ 
liant and successful books, *bow that these 
men staud as high ou earth as, by a 
certain text in tbe Book of Revelation, 
they seem to do in Heaven. The great 
Catholic church makes bachelorhood nu 
essential qualification for its ministry, and 
boys who do nicely at collego are given a 
sheepskin with their names glorified as 
Bachelors of ArU. It is not so necessary 
for womt'o, although some schools give It, 
for every girl is born a Mistress of Arts. 
Having said so much, it may be as well to 
quote on tho ether side the words of Boyle: 
“He that raid it was not good for man to 
bejalone, placed tho colibaU among the in¬ 
ferior orders of perfection"—for Oliver Bril 
Bunco, tho famous critic of the house of D. 
Appleton A Co. (Bachelor Bluff). 1* a mar¬ 
ried man, wi;h a beautiful cultured wife, 
nnd a son and daughter, or possibly more 
since wo knew him, that any muo 
might be proud of. Having been hi* edito¬ 
rial associate in 1S69, many of tbo words 
following entered into personal conversa¬ 
tions. Tho “Bachelor" see* so dearly, nnd 
bos such a womanly sort of intuition, that 
one need* be either a good listener or a very 
brilliant perran to be entirely at ease with 
him. In this ho resembles the late Ju Ige 
T. IV. Thomas, of Georgia, who saw truth 

clearly that he never could understand 
how one could differ with him and be hon¬ 
est. John R. Thompson, of Virginia, tbe 
sooecssor, and for a time tbe associate, of 
Edgar Allan Poe in the old Messenger, 
aud who died while literary editor 
of tiro Siiturdag Evening Pjst, with 
W. C. Bryant, was another of the keen 
critics who saw at a glance what dull jieoplo 
do not always see wheu the thine 1* ex¬ 
plained to them. Poe hituself bad the gift of 
iustant insight, and his collected writings on 
contemporary authors will rank In among 
hi* chief productions, in tho day that critics 
discover what he knew; that hi* prose poem 
Furcka is ivorth a toff of Bells and an 
aviary of Ravens. Our “Bachelor" is not 
used to bring kept waiting, and rays, as we 
sit opposite and lift tbe fragile tea cup of 
china two centuries old, “Remember that 
Truth commonly goes in ruseet and Error in 
purple." We reply, that as be is being re¬ 
ported, bo must remember bow difficult 
it is to get a compositor to seo 
that an attribute personified becomes capi¬ 
talized like a proper name, and adds: “Is 
ibnl opinion to bo put down without the In¬ 
verted comma*, or as borrowed!" He an¬ 
swers: “I have borrowed from everything 
and everywhere, to the best of my ability. 
• • He is richest in thi* world who bor 
row* most." Wo put in what lawyers call a 
“leading questiou," about tbe capacity of 
peoplo to borrow, which is a better ex- 
pra»>iou than learn. He flushes a little, as 
very earnest men do, and answers: 
“Whether a roan learns or not, sir, depends 
upon tho sensitiveness of the chemical plate, 
called bis brain." He adds iu a sort of 
sub growl: “There are people who begin by 
knowing nothing, and go on accumulating 
ignorance to tho end of their days." 

That black tea, taken from tbe egg shell 
porcelain, is delicious, and while he refills 
tbe cup we venture to tell tbe story of the 
university man who boasted of having boon 
through two colleges. His listener re¬ 
marked: “That reminds me of a young calf 
1 once bad that «ueked two cows." “And 
what of that, sir?' demanded tbe collegiate. 
“Nothing of that, save that it was a great 
calf,” was tbe calm reply. 

The Bachelor does not take kindly to in¬ 
terpolations and says gi lmly: **Tbe victim 
bad hi* remedy in such a simple question as, 
•Was it uot your mother who bad the calf?' 
He add*: 'What are opinions'—calf or 
no calf—'but imperfect knowledge? We do 
not bare opinions about tbe multiplica¬ 
tion table or tha equinoxes. An 
opinion is simply tbe angle of reflection, or 
tbe facet which onu's individuality presents 
to a subject, moaxuring not the whole nor 
many parts of it. but tbe dimensions of tbo 
reflecting surface. It is something perhaps 
if the reflection within its limits is a truo 
one." Not feeling quite sure of tbe size of 
our “facet" then reflecting the “Bachelor," 
or rathor of hi* opinion of its size, we, to 
change the tense from the present, asked him 
if, in going out to breakfast, bis pretereuce 
was lor the married or the unmarried. 

He leaned a little back, with that precious 
tea cup poised ou two Angers, and began a 
verbal picture as if be saw it all in the witch¬ 
ing tea leaves at the bottom of his cup. The 
true ee'dhetic does not strain his tea. 
He raid: “It was only three weeks ago that 
I accepted nn invitation from my friend 
Appleby. Appleby is married. Ho bos a 
wife. Must married men have, you say, 
but Appleby's wife makes him tunny times 
married. * • 1 shall not soon forget the 
first morning that I entered Appleby's break¬ 
fast room. It faced tbe north. Then il w&* 
wnruied economically by stray heat coaxed 
away from tbe kitchen range nnd persuaded 
to diffuse itself within this circle of domestic 


Oilcans Picayune.'] 

It is not proper for a young man to call at 
the house of a young lady without having 
been invited to do so. Nor is it proper for 
bim to make love to her without having first 
been invited, indirectly. 

Gould'* * tmrlly. 

I Philadelphia Call.] 

“If I were to give a dime to charity where 
dollars are demanded," raj's Jay Gould, “I 
would bo bankrupt within a yoar." This 
explains why Gould never gives a dime to 
chanty. ____ 

Qurnrh Yrauvh’* Utth a fqulrt Guo. 

lin//i<ini*porf B>eik/ost Table.) 

An Omaha pastor is trying to put a stop 
to Sunday night courting. He might as 
well try to comb out the snarled mane of the 
laving ocean with a flue tooth comb. 

Sol on a Hum Thi* Year. 

[G.’obo-Dcmorraf.] 

It is worthy of remark that lb© Presidency 
Is not seeking anybody this year with half 
the zeal tnat several people are seeking the 

Presidency^__ 

1 hr Eternal Iran Are llrro. 
f/ndtanupoli's Sentinel.] 

In the bright lexicon of tho Democracy 
t here is uo such word am surrender. 

The 'trouble EtplalneS. 

[Philadelphia Item, j 

Better fence in Manitoba to keep off another 

blizzard. ___ 

Abuorinal Spinal Elasticity. 

[Xctr York Morning Journal.] 

The backbouo of winter must be made of 
rubber. 


bliss—which it ordinarily failed to do. A 
breakfast room not cheered iu winter 
by a bright blaze is unworthy to 
sanctuary the domestic virtues. This 
was not all. Appleby's breakfast room 
was bung with varnished paper, and was 
furnished with chairs and buffet of oak. 
Upon the walls were a few black, old-fash¬ 
ioned prints, gloomy in wooden rrames. The 
floor was covered with an oak-colored 
carpet, because that cheerless color does uot 
show tho crurubi. Tho wludow-curtains 
were—tli«ro were no window-curtain*. The 
room was adorned In this particular with 
buff shades. TbU wa* Appleby's breakfast- 
room. all garnished and beautified in the fluo 
spirit and undar tbo perfect domination of 
*doraeslic bliss.' To this breakfast-room 
came Mrs. Appleby In an old shawl and curl 
papers, and several young Appleby*, all In tu¬ 
mult aud snarling disorder. In this cheerless 
room, half-lighted, dull for want of clieor- 
ful tints iu the furniture and fur lack of a 
blare on tbe benrtb— arranged purposely for 
a hurried nud comfortless matutinal meal— 
the ’domestic bliss’ of the Applcbys showed 
Itself in an hundred irritabilities." 

Wo do not write down all the “Bachelor" 
says, good as it is, but wait, with pencil and 
note book hid behind the silver lea-urn, for 
bim to see another picture in the tea-leaves of 
his w izurd-divining cup. He needs uo push¬ 
ing, now* that he is on bis hobby, and pres¬ 
ently the second picture begins to grow like 
trns: “It was only throe days after that I 


went to breakfast with genial John 
Bunker. Jack is a whole-souled fellow, 
w bo knows when a thing is recherche, and 
who has tbe wit to appreciate a bit of bache¬ 
lor felicity. He always breakfasts iu his li¬ 
brary—this being the name that hi» man 
James gives to his book-room—where he has 
a few books, a few pictures, and gathers ail 
the little tasteful articles that be owns, such 
as a vara or two, a statuette, a rare print, a 
bit of china; all of which he tone* up with 
warm upholstery, i, for my part, like to 
eat in my best apartment; to partake of my 
meals under the pleasantest and most en¬ 
livening conditions. Ealing nud drinking 
is, with me, a fine art. That 'good 
digestion may wait on appe¬ 
tite, and health on both, 1 I put 
my mind in its sweetest, calmest, most con¬ 
tented mood by means of all of the agreeable 
surrounds that I can command. Hence I 
looked around Jack Bunker's cozy apart¬ 
ment, tasting all tbe points. In the low, 
polished grate there was a blaze from bitu¬ 
minous coal. Tbe shining coffee-pot stood 
on a bras* pendant, and from it issued low, 
murmuring music and delicious odors. The 
fire light wa* glancing up on tho picture 
frames and gilt backs of tbe books, aud the 
w arm tinted walls and the ceiling, on drapery 
that fell over the doorway, and that partly 
shat out, partly let in at the windows tho 
bright glances of tbe moroiog sun. Then, 
tho brilliant white cloth on the table, the 
easy chairs for host and guest, a new picture 
only sent home tbo day before, standing on 
an earal near, and the morning paper warto- 
uig by the fire—well, it was a pleasant pic¬ 
ture." Hoitwa*, for tbe “Bachelor” raw 
just such another room, reflected in tho mir¬ 
ror of tbe porcelain in his baud, and in the 
tea-urn und iu few silver adjuncts. As a 
“leader," w© quoted from his friend, Mr. 
i.am way, who has “a weakness for senti¬ 
ment:" “But think of some beautiful crea¬ 
ture sitting by the side of tbe urn, serving 
your coffee, praising piof applauding, Inter¬ 
posed tbo 'Bachelor') the pictures, list¬ 
ening appreciatively as you read a bit 
I of nows from the morning journal, perhaps , 
with her hand in yours or w ith hor dainty 
feet on tho fender’ ('why say or,' said tbe 
Bachelor, 'it tuny be both*) chatting with 
you softly but joyously over many pleasant 
themes." 

Tho “Bachelor" said: “It must bo admit¬ 
ted that is a pleasant picture, but wb A t if the 
'lovely woman' comes down to tbe breakfast- 
room frouzy and fierce? Wimt if riio appears 
iu dressing-gown nud hair brushed, not 
coinbod? \\ hat if the has a chronic fondness 
for drfhahdiel How if ibo prove uue of 
those w bora nor vox never get caliu or in ac- 
coid until after tbe moruing has passed* 
If I open the door to a 'lovely woman,' 
there is no telling wbat Pandora's box I 
hhall uncover. It is a conviction of mine 
that perfectly refined dotu- suc comfort is 
underetood by men only." Wo reply with 
one word, “Heresy." Ho answers: 
“Women are not personally selfish enough 
to be fastidious in three things. ♦ * They 
have a cheerless and aggressive neatness— 
moral aud mfiaminatory, rather than lux¬ 
urious and artistic. Women aro rarely 
cpicurlau*." 

W e were aware of not making a verbatim 
report in our sbort-band notes behind the 
teu-urn, and the pencil paused in our 
interest as he told how woman prefers 
dress and Vanity Fair to intellectual repora. 
He argued that he was not a heretic, but a 
teacher, and that when women understood 
that, as society goes, domestic comfort is not 
a necessary con-tqueneo of marriage, they 
wrlll go to work to tuako it so. He said that, 
w ith rare egotism, they scorn the idea of tntu 
being able to have anything orderly, neat or 
tasteful about them, without women to sup¬ 
ply the conditions. He quoted history to 
show that domesticity in women, where It 
has existed, is, as in the Orient, often en¬ 
forced. He concluded by a twin picture of 
the two ideas of tne Lares and Penates. “I 
am wearied," says tho husband; “let me sit 
by the fire and dream aud rest." “Iam 
wearied," says tbe w'tfe; “let me visit my 
friends, or go to the opera or concert to be 
refreshed." 

We, silent in horror, listened while be raid 
that women prefer a bole in a wall, tbo hot¬ 
air register, to fire-light, and will shiver all 
day if the almanac does not ray it is the 
season to tuako fires. Some are unconquera¬ 
bly untidy, and the tidy ones make a tem¬ 
pest of their neatness. The rcatheuo ladies, 
instead of making home lovely, create a 
museum, in which to move is to kuock over 
a toy or a gim-craek. Tbe last word is not 
his. 

Again, as a loader, we uttered one word, 
“Poetry." Ho answered that tha function 
of poetry is not thought, but emotion, and 
disagreed with the couplet of Keats, a* ap¬ 
plied to poetry: 

“It should be a friend 

i To soothe tbe cares ami lift the i bought# of roan. ” 

He rays that few, unacquainted with the 
application, would name poetry as this 
“friend," but thinks more would name 
music or religion. He quoted from tbo frifl¬ 
oras of Tennyson: 

“Out we paced, 

I first, and follnwlny throux ihe porch that rang 
All round with laurel, issued la a court 
compact of lucid marbles," etc., 

and showed how, deprived of the 
rhythmic form and melody of measure, tha 
thought would bo mere prose. 

He wanted to give ms his ideal of a bouse, 
and of feminino tact, but I sugeMted “Art," 
and the ideal school of Doro, that would do 
away with tha realutio. I bad in my mind 
tbe Carl C. Brenuor Autumn picture, which 
is just a group of beeches in a Kentucky 
lowland in the fall, with a warm atmos¬ 
phere and a few fallen leaves on tbe mirror 
face of a pool,—the water tinged with 
autumn—simple nature. Ho did not give us 
time to mention our favorite, but raid: 
“For my part, I haven’t the slight¬ 
est objection to people seeing visions, 
but prefer that they should begin by 
seeiug fact*. The sculptor who translates 
all of tbo thousand expressions that exist in 
tbe human figure, will rival the great Phid- 
ms. Tbo landscapist who possesses himself 
with all the facts of nature will outdo all of 
bis compelitors. I p<?iut again to my gmup 
of trees—who will come nnd paint them? 
Not feebly and vaguely, but to reproduce 
them in all their glory—who will do it? You 
would find a hundred idealists to ono with 
perception* and hand true enough for tbe 
task. Idealism 1*. iu fact, tbe cheapest thing 
in tbe world. Bo far from its being that 
which cultured people only con comprehend, 
as critics ray, it is distinctly the thing that 
tho crude, untrained public admire. M 

As I crumpled up my notes that were so 
imperfect in their transcript of his quick, 
nervous speech, I ventured to say: “How 
would it do to make your opinions into a 
toxt-book for the common schools?" 

His wifound daughter came in just then— 
certainly not wbat he objected to In women, 
and be took his wife's hand with that 
courtly, chiralrou* touch of tbe old school 
that is so beautiful, and said, as he turned 
tbe facet of a splendid diamond toward me: 
“This reflects light very perfectly, but not 
largely. How many school-girl minds 
would be so true?" That expression he has 
never written. (X 


£(iip!d Uni Rich. 

[G<ifA on Yanderlili .J 

He bns no imagination at ail; he almost 
takes the fancy out of ono of ills paintings by 
Mantling before it. His nature is Holland 
Dutch, more fond of an Interior scene witu 
pipe-sand beer and cattle than of all tbe ef¬ 
fects of Turner or tho restoration* of Gerome. 


Juit GI*© Him Time. 
[Philadelphia Tunes J 

A point in Mr. Blaine’s favor—he isn’t 
sowing sectional tares in tbo public wheat. 
















































































THE COURIER-JOURNAL: LOUISVILLE, MONDAY, MARCH 10. 1884 


LONDON’S OUTCAST. 


*Tb Bitter Cry” That Made the People of Eng¬ 
land's Capital Open Their Hearts and 
Pams to the Poor. 


“HIS BLUE-EYED DABLIKG,” 


[Sp~cin!Corr*»uoiutence of th* Courier-Journo J 
London*, Feb. S3.—It ha* betm Luo fasmou 
this winter to show a kindly n-gard for the 
poor. In tho autumn a boiDunbell burst 
over the country in the ehape of a small 
pamphlet, entitled "Tuo Bitter Cr/ of Out¬ 
cast London.” Such an opening of eyes 
and emptying of purses as followed tbls na¬ 
tion never witnessed before. In the work 
of relief tho initiative seems to have been set 
by a kind Providence, for such mild weather 
Las not been known in sixty years. A 
marked feature of the epidemic was the uni¬ 
versal impulse of all classes to go and see for 
themselves. None doubted the correctness 
of the revelations made in tho pamphlet, 
yet every one was anxious to veri¬ 
fy them by personal observa¬ 
tion. Contrary to their custom, a 
spirit of enterprise was exhibited by eveu 
the nowspapers, reprt->entalives of these be 
rag sent on daily and nightly visits to the 
haunts of vice and misery, ani the sicken¬ 
ing details being spread before the public the 
day following, with such regularity and 
realism that wo seemed for a time to be liv¬ 
ing in the same squalid rooms as the poor 
and to breatho the putrid atmosphere sur¬ 
rounding them. 

Tne results of those explorations wore sat¬ 
isfactory on the whole; but in individual 
cases serious trouble eusued. One reporter 
got the small-pox, another got his head 
punched, and another, who had undertaken 
to Impersonate a vagrant, was taken to the 
lock-up. But the press, though a leader in 
this movement, w.*a far from having a 
monopoly of it, for the clergy, tboaristocra¬ 
cy, and even the Government, took 
it up. When Sir Charles Dilke, a mem¬ 
ber of the Cabinet, started out to 
make 'tho rounds, the climax was 
supposed to have b*eu reached. This, how¬ 
ever. was not to, for within tho last week 
Royalty itself has entered the field. Tho 
other day, accompanied by a couplo of 
friend*, no less a personage than the Prince 
at Wales made a visit of inspection. He 
was ia cog., of course, but his features arc 
so well known in London that it was impos¬ 
sible for him to eacapo recognition; ami ru¬ 
mor hath it that iu some of the abodes visited 
tho conversation between the wretched in¬ 
mates autl the one whom they knew to be 
heir to the throne was exceedingly touching 
—so much so that the Prince w as visibly af¬ 
fected. But. bo this as it may, there can bo 
no doubt that his tour in the slums has rnado 
him 

▲ SADDER AND WISER MAN, 

nor that it has added greatly to his populari¬ 
ty. Doubtless we shall bear soon that- other 
members of the Queen's family have fol¬ 
lowed in the Prince's footsteps, and if only 
the old lady herself would take a trot 
around, spending u little mure tune in acts 
of practical benevolence among the starving 
thousand- of London, and a little less in at¬ 
tending weddings and christenings in low* 
life among her "beloved Highlanders,” tho 
climax would indeod be readied, with re¬ 
sults, too, no left* satisfactory to the Queen's 
own health and spirits than to the parties 
benefited and tho general cause of active 
phihuithrophy. 

But the Queen, whatever her personal de¬ 
fects. is certainly blessed with an active and 
useful set of children. It may be justly 
charged that they gobble up some of the best 
positions in the public service, but it can not 
be ailoged that, after having secured these 
fat places, they loll around on purple and 
leave others to do the work, it is nothing 
for the Duke of Connaught to spend two years 
of exile at a military post in Iudlaf Does 
Edinburgh make no sacrifice when he crui«e* 
in foreign seas for tnoath* at a time, whilo 
his wife revels in tbo gayoties of the London 
season and makes almost nightly visits to the 
theater! How much the Prince of Wales is 
doing everybody knows. Practically the 
Sovereign, ami with all his mother's work 
on bis bauds, ho still finds time to respond to 
tbs calls of sweet charity and has just shown 
himself ready, not only to patronize 
the poor, but to even visit, them, and offer in 
persun both sympathy and help. The Duke 
of Albany Is likewise busy. Tuts fourth sun 
of Her Majesty is the special friend of tem¬ 
perance societies. Ho is credited with being 
personally a total abffuiiier, and in a recent 
speech is reported to have said that drink 
was "the worst enemy England had to fear," 
titrong words these for a Iiritub Prince—too 
strong, one man felt, evidently, for a couple 
of weeks uftorwai.i this miscreant lluug tin* 
contentsuf njiotof beorattlio Prince's head. 
But Hi* Royal Highness, it is to be honed, 
will not be turned trout his chosen oouree by 
a little affair like this. Any one, bo lie Prince 
or peasant, who advocates temperance in 
Engiaud is sure to find that be bus an uphill 
task and must expect to be treated with iu- 
dignltv. Tuit cause, however, is moving on, 
an i with royalty m tho lead wo may cxjioct 
to had 

1TB FTTCRE PROGRESS 
greatly accelerated. 

The breach of promise case in which Miss 
Fiuiicy, better known as Miss Fortescue, into 
of the Savoy Theater, will seek to obtain 
£250, ui^ from Lord Garmoyle, grow** m 
interest from day to day uud when it 
finally comes up for trial will no doubt at- 
trnct*widespreud attention in both countries. 
The circumstances are altogether ©xcej»- 
tioual. When the heir to an earldoiu be¬ 
came engaged to a popular and beautiful 
actress, it was inevitable that the nit ur 
would become a subject of uewspaper gos¬ 
sip, and that the movements of the parties 
would be closely watched by the sensation- 
loving public. To such an extent has this 
been don© in the present instance, 
that really tho romantic courtship 
has been carried on under tho gaze 
of all Loudou, every incident having been 
proclaimed as from tne housetops. The 
general public, however, looked upon the 
match with upi.rovul. In choosing* a bride 
without regard to her rank, and m defiance 
of social prejudice, Lord Garmoyle made 
himself, for the tune, quite a hero, whilo the 
fortunate lady, who was regarded as having 
made such a good catch, won no more en¬ 
vied by her sisters of the stage than *hu w as 
admired and lauded by the outside world. It 
was supposed to be a genuine love affair, 
and when all the facts came to be known 
it was found that there was not such a 
wide divergence as apin»ar<?d at first 
in tho aortal status of the couple. 
In personal character, Mias Fort. >ue 
turned out to be the pink of perfection— 
a very important point as thing;, go m this 
queer world, though tv© havo not heard bow 
Lord Garmoyle stand, in tins matter, and 
nobody seems to think it at all important to 
inquire. Cesar’s wife must bo above sus¬ 
picion, even though Oear himself be a rake. 

But the great dilliculty was iu tin* matter 
of descent and the relative station of tbo two 
lovers. When, however it transpired that 
Miss Finnoy was tbo daughter or a highly 
respectable London tradt-t.mnu. and u ut-u 
t ho public recollected that Gannovl©’* father, 
Karl Cairns, was tue son of a Belfast woolen 
merchant, and that bis elevation to the peer¬ 
age was of recent date, and wo* duo to nig 
SC0CES8 AS A LAWYER, 
it was felt that the pair, despite the ap¬ 
parent gulf between them, could come to¬ 
gether after all on somethin:; liko an equal 
rooting. This wav the outride view of tho 
case—the view of the people: but the ari.tuc- 
racy looxed at the affair differently. I nm 
told that from the first publicity of the en¬ 
gagement Lord Garmoylo ha* been worried 
almost out of; bis life’by appeals made to 
him trorn tblsrla* . to break off the match, 
lud rumor deaignata*. n > Li* chief torment¬ 
or, tho Duke of Richmond. This gentleman, 
protesting agaitui the man tag© of a pro¬ 
spective Earl to a woman who, though vir¬ 
tuous. was held to bo beneath him iu rank, 
reminds one very much of Butan reproving 
•ifi. Those familiar with tho fcUqry of 
Charles IX-♦ from whom tbo Kichunmds re¬ 
ceived tbeir tit tu and riRnto*, con furred 
under the most disgraceful circumstances, 
will know atoncewhut I* meant, and a word 
to t he wise will be sufficient. 

The oupueitiou of tho intended bride¬ 
groom's father was mors natural and justi¬ 


fiable. Being a strictly religious man, the 
most devout, perhaps, of all the English 
j>eers, constantly in demand as Chairman of 
all the great church meetings, he would, of 
cour-e, base his chief objection to the match 
on the ground of bis conscientious scruples 
against the stage. In reiiorting Earl Cairns 
as having said that he looked upon all theat¬ 
rical people as so much "dirt,” Lord Gnr- 
moyle lias probably been guilty of gross ex¬ 
aggeration. But it is an open secret that 
this gentleman does not patronize the play¬ 
house. and that be believes the theater to be 
exerting a baneful influence. For the father, 
consequently, some allowance can be made. 
Muny, indeed, will feel real sympathy for 
httu. But nothing can justify the interfer¬ 
ence of other peers, nor can any thing exten¬ 
uate the l*a»a conduct of the recreant 
lover. Even tho*e who *hnre the 
feelings of £nrl Cairns toward tne stag* 
must still admit that to make a plaything of 
a virtuous girl, and then heartlessly cast her 
off simply because she belongs to ibe theat¬ 
rical profession, is an net which deserves nt 
once the severest reprobation and tho very 
heaviest penalties. If anything could add 
to the jgnomlny of Lord Garmoyle s course, 
it would be * the pusillanimous letter be 
wrote breaking off the engagement, in 
which, it is said, ho expressod regret at hav¬ 
ing to part with hi* 

"BLUE-EYED DARLJNO,” 
and wound up by asking her to name her 
solicitor. In dealing with defendant* in 
cases of this kind, English juries are pro¬ 
verbially severe, and it is expected that in 
this instance they will be unusually so. Miss 
Furteseue, however, will hardlv get all she 
asks. But she need not rapine over her 
financial prospects, for, to a ureal personal 
b-auty, she now adds a world-wide notorie¬ 
ty. not at all discreditable to her; and 
though she is not an actress of the first 
rank, her services are already in great de¬ 
mand hy enterprising managers, and it may 
be safely predicted that w hen sbo returns to 
the stage she will not only receive an ova¬ 
tion, but wili reap a golden harvest. 

It must not be thought that the attitude of 
Earl Cairns, as set forth of above, represents 
the feeling* toward tho stage of tho gen¬ 
erality of church people over here. His case 
is quite au exception, for most of tbo mem¬ 
bers of that body go to the play with as few 
scruple* ns they go to their prayers, and there 
l* no end of theater goer* even among the 
clergy. It t* not Ion ; since (anon Shuttle- 
worth followed Mr. Harris, of Drury Laue, 
in delivering an address from the stage of 
that theater just before the final act in "Cin¬ 
derella," an 1 in to day's paper the indefati¬ 
gable manager of that bouse announce* a 
special matinee for the families of poor 
curates, inviting not only the**, but all other 
impecunious ministers to bring their house¬ 
holds to tue performance free of charge. 
This will teem like something of a novelty to 
Americans, and tho strangest thing about it 
is that Mr. Harris claims to have taken Ibis 
course in response to appeals made to him bv 
the clergy themselves. Many doubtless will 
think, with the writer, that this i* carrying 
the clergyman's free-pass business a little 
too far. 

Tne old Blandford-Avlesford svandal is up 
in the courts again. This case hu* ls>en a 
running tore of corruption for several years. 
It first broke out when L’tdy Aviesford and 
Bland ford (now tho Duke of Murlborougb) 
eloped together. Later on carat* the sicken- 
eulug details of the Marchioness of Btaml- 
ford’s successful divorce. Other develop¬ 
ments have been the •reparation of Lord aud 
Lidy Aylesfor l (neither biting able to g«ft a 
divorce). and the passage of a bill through 
the House of Lords to prevent h**r Lady¬ 
ship 1 * illegitimate •on from succeeding to her 
husband'* title. It is said that, wjien Bland* 
f >rd tired of his mistreat, he settled matters 
with a pension of 42,5 K) a year, and the 
Earl of A) lesford got rid of Her at the same 
price. This, with her private fortune, bos 
enabled the frail isdv to get along tolerably 
woll. But her husband, tt appears, has re¬ 
cently stopped payment. This last freak 
forms the ground of the lawsuit, which 
commenced on Tuesday, Lady Ay les¬ 
ford suing, through her trustee, 
for th* fit ream. The defense is that one of 
the conditions of the oettleinent was that tbo 
Countess should in no way "molest" tbo 
Earl bv her subsequent conduct, aud that 
this condition hHs been broken, the lady hav¬ 
ing, it is alleged^ committed adultery "with 
persons known aud unknown.” It t* further 
alleged that her child, which she admits to 
be tho sun of tho Duke of Marlborough, is 
habitually called by the name of Lord 
Guernsey, a name which is the exclusive 
property of the prospective Earl of Ayles- 
foro. These circumstance*, it i>< contended, 
constitute legal "molestation," and render 
void the Earl’s arrangement for her sup¬ 
port. Upon the question of whether simple 
adultery can bo considered "mole*tation,” 
tho Judge has already ruled in the negative. 
But upon the peculiarly aggravating cir¬ 
cumstances of the case he reserves judgment 
to au adjourned cession, when, it is ex¬ 
pected. the wayward Countess and The am¬ 
orous Duke will be called to testily. H. T. 


Th© borlfly Girl. 

When the work of building a tower on tho 
plain of Shtuar, wbc*e top might reach the 
ht-avens, euded in failure and cent union, 
may we not gim-.s that tbo first astounded 
grumbler that found tongue to speak threw 
the whole blame upon the women! ask* 
C. D. F. in tho Now York Evening lost. 
And if this were so, then in all lauds 
and iu entry language his successor* 
have lived and spoken; and vain the 
hope that fire or fluod, pestilence, war or 
famine, or any like disaster will rid the 
world ot tne entire kith and km till tho coin¬ 
ing of the final conflagration. And even then 
may we not Imagmo that some blazing, fiery 
taunt from the "last man" of the race will 
learn forth on the scroll of the dissolving 
•.ravens! A vory recent arraignment of 
the "society girl,” quoted from the old 
and well-worn catalogue of her sins by a 
w riter in oue of our city journals, presents 
her as passing a buttertlv existence iu 
ball*, routs and other fashionable dissipa 
tiotw—net-spreading aud without one serious 
thought or act iu life—a vain, empty-headed 
nonentity, and so on to tho end of a chapter 
with which wb are all quite too familiar. 
The fault with alt such pictures as those is 
that they are grievous caricatures or solitary 
and excvp iotml specimens which an honest 
and unprejudiced analysis would reject na a 
truthful and intelligent description, of a 
whole class—the chi** in tbD instancerbt-inj; 
the "society g»rL" of our country. It i* to 
be hoped that tho lines of life of this 
sprightly but sarcastic and misleading critic 
w til yet bo ca*t In scenes and place- where 
a different type of American girl—the real 
representative of tho young womanhood of 
our couutry—sbaff pass before and impress 
his vision. For tho lund abounds with girls 
in Boeioty aud out of it. whom Providence 
ha* bica-ed with brauty, good sense and the 
attributes of earnestness and high endeavor, 
which should save tin* s*x, as it does not, 
from the shaft* of ridicule and ignorance. 
Thousands of th©>o girls, who may, if they 
will, live lives of listless ease uud luxury, 
nro nevertheless accustomed to walk 
their five or *ovon miles u day, wield a steady 
oar In boating, make tndr 'own dresses for 
home or party wear, make cake, puddiugn, 
pic- and bread, while making Hun.siiiira iu 
their homes; and this chuts is neither deiron- 
eratingnor decreasing iu number. Toe 
nnuihonias will couiiuuo; yet. ull the same, 
tue derided "society girl' 1 will continue to 
robe herself in gay attire, wear ribbons, 
luce* and Much toilets as *utta her whim or 
fancy, without low of either conscleuco or 
self-respect, and go on enjoying file as best 
she indy till time ends all. 


*\\rll Gwynne" a Pln;Uriim. 

[frill Mail Budget.] 

"The critics," writes a correspondent, "do 
not appear to have discovered that Mr. H. 
B. Farnio’s *Noli Owynno' is nothing more 
nor law than the cooltbt plagiarism of a mu¬ 
sical couiody known to »>ld play -goer- us 
‘Rochester; or. King Charles II.^ Merrv 
Days,’ by VV. J. MoncrielT. played rcq>ee- 
tlvely at the Olympic and Adelpni Theaters, 
w ith EUULon and IVretnh us the hero. Tho 
ir<v/s»f of Mr. Arthur Robert* is tho Starvi- 
monsr of Keeley aud Buckingham. The 
Bfad/e ot Lionel Brough is the A men Squeak 
of lienderAon and John Iteeve, Mr. l arnle 
even condescends to borrow the ‘coupterfeit- 
rat-catcbcr. * This once inmnus comedy or 
farce, said by the critics of it- day to be 
•one unsophisticated broad grin,* has been 
duly spoile t by providing four character-* 
for .lfias tit. John, instead of retaining the 
original Countess of Lovtiavyh and Lady 
Omj who mud* the plot perfectly clear. 
•Rochester’ should not have been forgotten, 
because it bos a certain historical interest. ’’ 


Tbr \rw ltu««imi tnifurui. 

1/Vtfi Mnll tfaztttc.] 

A new* part in the equipment of a Russian 
soldiur is a military handkerchief, designed 
by a Russian otficer, which has a border 
representing the mo*t lively bufilo scenes, 
with a lull description of each picture, while 
from the middle the soldier inavtakc a lesson 
ip tho mechanism of all kinds'of i dies and 
guns, of which clear and accurate drawings 
and minute explanations are giveu. 


TIIE LOUISIANA CONVENTION. 


Notes and Comment* an a Gathering in Louisiana, 
the Most Intelligent Part of Whioh Wes 
Composed of Colored Men. 


LOUISIANA THE NEGRVB HOME. 


f Correspondence of the ^ourlrr-Jounirtl.] 
New Orleans, March 7.—The Louisiana 
State Republican Convention, which ha* 
ju t concluded its labors in tins city, and the 
result of which has already been announced 
by telegraph, possessed numerous features of 
Interest, the most striking of which was the 
large proportion of colored men—about 00 
or 95 per cent. I ure the indefinite expres¬ 
sion, "about 00 or 05 j>er cent.,” because 
the composition demands it. The color ro*e 
gradually from crow black to magnolia 
white, and reminded oue of what tue poet 
said about the Darwinian theory— 

"It is hard to tell 

When man became man— 

Where the motl ey type ceased 
And site huiuua nejeau." 

So, in tlm convention, it was bard to tell 
where the colored type ceased and the white 
began. The percentage of colored men was 
about the same among the 178 delegates at* 
it was among the 800 or 1,000 composing 
the whole body of attendants. The weight 
of intelligence was obviously on the aide of 
the colored ruen, and that regardless of num¬ 
bers. for should the entire number of whites 
be compared with an equal number of their 
colored friends, selected from the most in¬ 
telligent, tho bn lane© iu favor of the bitter 
would be clearly apparent. But notwith¬ 
standing tbls, tho honor* of tho convention 
were equally divided, except in the make up 
of tlie State ticket, where the co.ored man 
was not accorded an even divide, three- 
fourths of the places on the ticket being 
given to white men. But greater unfairness 
than this was demonstrated m the 
DISTRIBUTION OF HONORS 
between the custom-house official* and those 
who do not hold offices in that institution. 
The temporary Chairman, temporary Secre¬ 
tary, pet mauenC Chairman, permuneut Sec¬ 
retary, Bergeant-at-Arm*, three of tho four 
derogates from tho Stato-at largo, and other 
officers and appointees of the convention, 
were Custom-house officials. The truth is, 
tbAt the Custom-house fellows sot tberasolvcs 
up as the backboue of the Republican party 
in Louisiana; but they do not always carry 
their po nt. In the convention they opposed 
tho nomination of a 8tat© ticket, but a ticket 
was nominated, and w ith considerable en¬ 
thusiasm. Several Republicans said to tuo 
that the Caelum hou*e officials had good rea¬ 
sons for opposing a State ticket, since a set 
of rueii wuo would tbu* put themselves up to 
be slaughtered by the Democrat* might Uud 
grace m Cue eyes of tbu Kresideiit ano be re 
warded by displacing some officer in the 
Cuntom-buuse. 

But, alter all, tbe^delegates to the National 
Convention at Chicago went uumslructed, 
for otherwise, should some uiau other 
than the oue receiving the indureo- 
roent of the convent ion be nominated 
and elected President, a senes of 
decapitations in the Custom-house would 
oertuinly follow. The Custom-house doubt- 
lev* Ira*‘great weight. Ouo of the grandest 
building* in tho world* with numerous hlgb- 
sulaned officers and $14,OOU,OUO iu the 
vault, has of necessity a crushing weight. 

The conventual was not unanimous on 
several other points. A resolution to boom 
Senator Log&n was killed, and on© to favor 
Mr. Arthur met the same fate, although his 
Administration.was mdorsed. L. A. Mar¬ 
tinet. a custom-hou*© official and editor of 
the Louisiana Standard, offered a resolution 
asking the removal of one D. A. Novin, who 
holdi the position of Special Customs In¬ 
spector, or ftoiuutbing of that kind, and tho 
speech of Martinet iu offering the resolution 
was warmly applauded, but the committee 
to which it was referred smothered it in it* 
infancy. Neviu was the man who cmuwnl 
Arthur’s removal from tho Port of New 
York. Martinet’s lather was a Frenchman 
aud his mother 

A COLORED WOMAN. 

He wields a free lance, aud pitches into the 
Administration whenever he feels so in¬ 
clined. Resided with Nichols, although he 
held a Government office, and Hayes chopped 
off his official head. He was reinstated un¬ 
der the next Administration, but tbi* time 
wanted an instruction lor Arthur aud ap¬ 
peared to again risk the consequences, he 
addressed the Chair somethiug like sixty 
lime:* during the Convention. 

While th© report ot the Committee on 
State Ticket was under discussion, the Hou. 
David Young, ex-btate Sena or from Con¬ 
cordia parish, offered a substitute for the 
ticket, in which he nominated Hon. Mr. 
MeEuery and other* of the Democratic 
ticket us a people’s ticket. This created a 
tornado of excitement, but Young and his 
friends bold their own for some time before 
tho convention downed them. Young is a 
full-blooded colored man. 

There was some trouble over parish repre¬ 
sentation, and several delegates, one of luein 
a w hite man, who openly madetheannounco- 
meut. said they w ould not support tho ticket 
an nominated. 

Mr. btevenson, the nominee for Governor, 
is a rich planter, about 65 year* Old, and Is 
a poor speaker. He accepted the nomina¬ 
tion with a few word*, announcing that bu 
policy, if el acted, should be ibe 

"SUCCESS or LOUISIANA.” 

It Is the unanimous opinion of the Demo¬ 
crats, backed by tuuuy Republican*, that 
Mr. Steveusou stand* no more cbunce of 
electiou Hutu a ouo-legged man of winning a 
foot race. 

Tbo convention was cnlled to order by 
Gen. A. S. Badger, iu Odd Follows* Hall, u 
spacious and elegant building, in which the 
Nichols government was formed in the con¬ 
test with Packard. Gen. Badger is too well 
known ior comment here, aud I might say 
tho same of Hou. Wm. Pitt Kellogg, the per¬ 
manent CLairiu in. Kellogg is, f presume, 
becoming prematurely old, for one of th© 
delegates, named Vance, a clerical looking 
man from the parish of Orleans, in making 
a bloody-shirt speeeoh on tho motion to table 
Youngx McEnery resolution, referred to 
Kellogg’s "silvery hair and broken coniti- 
union, the result of intolerable Democratic 
rule. ’ ’ 

When this motion was made, a delegate 
naked the Chair to havo "that motion mad© 
magnanimous all down the line.” It was 
fuither along that another delegate said: 
"Mr. Chairman, I is riz to a p’mt .of iuila- 
mation.” 

Rev. Jackson, of tho Free Mission Baptist 
Church, colored, opeued the couvouUun 
w ith prayer, and It was ably done. 

Hon. A. J. Dumont, of this city, the tom- 
lorary ©bninnan, is an accomplished man. 
Its lather was a nurgeon in tho French 
t»rmv , and his mother a Colored woman of 
Virginia. Ho sitoaks the French and .Spanish 
language* grammatically and fluently, and 
has a conversational knowledge of‘Italian 
uud hum or two other language.-. Hn wo* n 

lieutenant of cavalry und©r Maximilian, und 
while bearing orders from that ill-fated Gen¬ 
eral to Gen. Mejia, was captured by th© 
Mexicans. He swallowed tho dispatches; 
uud escaped after some mouths of confine¬ 
ment . He wo* Chau man of the Packard 
Campaign Committee, and was the la-t to 
deseri that Government. Ho has for seven 
years been Chairman of the 

STATE CENTRAL COMHITTEE, 

Col. Wm. Viggers, tho Secratary, was 
Secretary of the first Republican mooting 
ever held in LunUiana, which wav convened 
under tho rule of Geu. Bcnj. F. Butler, in 
1862, and ha* been Secretary of every Re¬ 
publican convention trace lira organization 
in 1867, w ith only one exception. He ii a 
rotund octoroon ox much urbanity. 

Capt. Joe Lawler, the Sergeant-at-arms. 
is a native of Ireland, and served lour years 
os Captain of a Connecticut company in tho 
Federal army. Subsequently bo returned to 
lreinnd, wus arrested as a Fenian aud kept 
iu solitary confinement in Kllinainhaui jail, 
Dublin, lor more than a year. He* wus at 
hut released upon condition that be would 
abandon the country, wnicb hu did. coming 
again to the Uuited States; but again re¬ 
turned to Ireland, and wus again arrested 
a|id imprisoned. Upon being released be 
sailed fur America once more. H»* ha* had 
many other adventure*, his life reading liko 
u romance. 

The distinguished P. B. S. Pincbback was 
of couive present, and mnde Chairman of thn 
Committee on Organization. II© wm e octed 
fir*t Vice President and on© of tho four del¬ 
egates from the State at iarg«* to tho Chicago 
Convention, Kellogg, Dumont and Badger 
being tho other throe. Piuchback was op¬ 
posed to tho nomination ot the State tickt^. 
He wo*» perhaps th© l»est speaker in the con¬ 


vention. He is a fine-looking man, though 
turning prematurely eray. 

As is usual in ail deliberative bodies, a few 
men did tbe talking. Besides Iho*e already 
mentioned, were State Senator Demos, Hon. 
T. T. Allain, Senator Blount and R*?v. 

,Haynes, ajl colored. Demos is a jet black, 
and Allain is a mulatto. They observed 
great dignity while addre'sing the conven¬ 
tion, and winced thorough familiarity with 
parliamentary tactics, and usually 
CAHHIILD TUEtR POINTS. 

Upon the floor w*»re ex-Gov. Mike Kahn, 
Sute Treahurer Herwig. Hun. George Drury, 
Hon. Louis J. Souer. Po-tmaiter Merchant, 
Hon. L. A. Beutly, District Attorney Leon¬ 
ard, Col Jolly, Cm Led Mates Cohier Jones 
and others, all white. Al**o Surveyor Gen¬ 
eral Lewis. Hon. Oliver Pierre Lannry, Hon. 
Thomas Cage, Hon. John Wobre, Hun. John 
Cayollt*. Hun. Jord ir. Stuart. Hon. Wijimm 
Hnrper. cx-Lieut. Gov. C. C. Antoine and 
Col. W. B. Smith, all colored; and also F. 
W. Ltggins, editor of tho St. Marv Herald 
and Chairman of the "sugar delegation” 
sent to Washington, and Philip Joseph, 
editor of tho Mobile Herald, colored. It 
would seem from tbu above list that the col¬ 
ore I men bnve all along bad sumo of tho 
honors of tho country. 

Tue be*t- 1 1 rosed man in the bouse was 
Charles A. It<»xborough, peputy Collector of 
Custom*, a native of Louisville, and perhaps 
the youngest culored delegate in the conven¬ 
tion. 

The brightest voung colored man in the 
convention was John L. Minor, a native of 
Louisville, clerk its the office of Collector of 
Customs, end an editor of th* standard. 
HU father was once a porter on the packers 
between Louisvillo ana Cincinnati, aud was 
in tho horrible coIlUiun at Madison, Ind.; 
but was subsequently appointed a Professor 
in Aicorn University, Mississippi, nod finally 
uinde Assistant Secretary of 6tate. 

Ttic convention worked slowly, and was 
two days und nights in session. At times 
there was 

considerable excitement, 

and frequently from five to ten del-gates de¬ 
sired to address the Cuair at the sauio mo¬ 
ment. 

Wnrmotb, the unenviable, wo* appointed 
a delegate from hi* parish, but failed to at¬ 
tend. , 

Col. James Lewi*, above mentioned. Is one 
of tbe must prominent colored men in tbo 
South. He rnised the first regiment of col¬ 
ored troopi thnt entered the Federal ariuv; 
w*as the fir*»t c -lured man appointed by tbe 
Government to a civil position tn Louisiana, 
being made Inspector of Custom, and sub¬ 
sequently held tbe office* of Sergeant of 
Mctro|)Olitan Police. Captain of Police, 
Coiorad v»f Militia, Admint-trator of Polio**, 
salary $0,000 per yenr; Administrator of 
Public Improvements, Naval Officer of the 
Port of New Orleans, and 8urve\*or Gen¬ 
eral. 

It Is perfectly clear to the most casual ob¬ 
server that tlie colored ninnS homo in m 
Louisiana. Here he flourishes to the most 
subluuo height; Tip. 


jiio ru ns. 

Coujroun lealloo* from unsroi ilrlstlte to Hie 
;\r*t bxpo*nl. n 

f7*o the Ed l-r of the CYra* ier-Journal. 1 

March 8, 18S].—I hav© liven very much 
surprised to note tho apparent apathy with 
which tho businees men of Luutsvilie regaid 
the effort* of the public-spin ted parties who 
are endeavoring to make the coming Exposi¬ 
tion a success. 

Having been absent from this, my native, 
city lor the last ten years, perhaps I am 
better able to judge the many changes time 
has wrought in this garden city. 

The rapid growth of some portions of the 
city is astoniKhing, and tn ull my travels I 
have not seen a city more desirable in every 
respect for residence than Louisville. But I 
am sorry to have to say that I have been as¬ 
tonished that many element* of old fogytsm 
still exist, which are more forcibly brought 
to tho notice of slraugor* than to old resi¬ 
dents. 

Louisville has advantages of location that 
many cities striving for supremacy 
would be proud of, and would 
grasp with eagerness the magnificent 
opportunities which seem to be ca»t osido 
here. In this age of progress Id ties, like in¬ 
dividual*. limit keep abreast of the times, 
and, failing to take advantage of all oppor¬ 
tunities to enhance their pruhpority, they 
will be pushed to tue wall by nraro wide¬ 
awake rivals. It won’t do to stand still and 
depend on prestige, or wait for outsiders to 
build her bunness up of their own volition. 
Every business man in Louisville has a direct 
and lively interest in this expected Exposi¬ 
tion, or nhould have. It can b© safely esti¬ 
mated that every pe«>ou who is brought 
to Louisville to see an exposition of this na¬ 
ture leaves $ol> in the city, iu the course of 
the season aL least 10J.00O visitors will 
cume, if sufficient inducements are offer¬ 
ed. They will leave 85,000,000 m 
Louisville. The committee is asking 
for the insignificant Him of #200,000 
in order to urake sufficient arrangement* to 
attract this crowd to th© city. And th© bus¬ 
iness men -huiiId remember that this is to be 
a peculiar season. The two groat parties are 
to hold their conventions iu Chicago this 
summer. Luuisviile. m view of this fact, 
slioui I so arruugo matters that almost any 
ouo who visited Chicago os u delegate or 
looker-op would be Attracted toward this 
citv by the fine character ot her exhibits. 

Thn* xuramer will be one of action, and 
many will lie on the move. Iu speaking of 
Louisville 1 uu-an her business men, ami it 
won't do for them to stand idly with their 
hands iu their pockets ami expect to leap 
any benefit for tue summer season. Tuey 
w Ul have to bring their hands up out of 
their pockets with the ready money in 
them and say to the committee, "God 
speed.” 

tit. Louts jump* Into thp arena with a sub¬ 
scription of over half a million dollars. Cin¬ 
cinnati is doing her level best in this line. 
Even the far-off Western cities are dunatiug 
large sums for their lo^al shows. 

Ran Francisco expeuds ©very year over 
84UO.OOU on her Mechanics’ Fair, and has a 
permanent institution. Ibe lit lie city .of 
aacramento also expend* large sums for her 
yearly fair. 

Ail the large cities In tbe United StAtes 
have flue pa»ks and drives. Woat has Lou¬ 
isville? lu other States all tho citireus take 
pride in their metropolis. 

Th© Mecca of Ohio is Cincinnati; of Ill¬ 
inois, Chicago; of Missouri, St Louis; of 
Louisiana, Now Orleans; of California, San 
Franci-co; of Texas, San Antonio, aud ad 
libitum; but iu Kentucky, whore! oh, 
where is th© sacred i*pot toward which tho 
pilgrim’s gaze is fixed! Louisvtile should be 
th© place. But is she? 

Tue city uf Galveston, Texas, is a plucky 
little city, being so very tenacious uf her 
rights ami so zoulous in her desire to bavo 
lexaiih sperai their money at home that she 
get* up a "Mnrdi Gras" carnival of her own 
and thus keop* many away Irotn New Or¬ 
leans. Loui*vide must ki». p pace with th© 
Mdrlt of the ago we live iu if su© wants to l»e 
hi the trout tank. It won’t do to go in 
spurts. Achieve u grand success and expire 
iu the effort. No. isho must realize that in 
adjacent cities she lias rivals, taking ndvant- 
ng«? of every false move and enjoying ©very 
discomfiture she bus. Tb©nuLi©ipatetl Expo- 
m trail this season should excel] (ho lost, and 
should keep on increasing in interest each 
year until perfection Is reached. Louisville's 
motto should bo "Excelsior.” J. G. C. 


LnuliTlIle'i OUts. 

[To the Editor of the Courier-Journal .] 

But five short months remain before (he 
tuuo will have arrived when tuo Exposition, 
ir we art* to havo one. must lx* ready for 
visitors. Ev ry one, who is at ell cooversaut 
'will tho management of huge afi'uirs, kuows 
that ibis is an exceedingly limited period, 
and that not a duv cau now be lost without 
serious injury. The Directors and the small 
band of merchants, u ho were clear-headed 
enough to comprehend the importance of ih© 
enterprise from the start, have douo all in 
their power, with th© avnstunov of tho press, 
to acquaint our community with the impor¬ 
tance of prompt action and liberal sup¬ 
port; circulars fully explaining overy 
detail have been tamed; strung and frequent 
personal solicitations havo b.-cu inode, and 
stall the required sum has not been sub¬ 
scribed. Fifty thousaud dollars ore yet 
m-edtd before the Direct*7ry can consider any 
of tbo subscriptions binding, and until that 
amount is forthcoming they can not, in jus¬ 
tice to themselves and ttu-ir trust, make a 
contract or solicit an exhibit. 

Why there should bo such bockwardness 
on the part of our merchants, manufacturers, 
professional men and real ©Atate owners is 
beyond comprehension. Why they should 
fail to understand so simple a business prop 
odliou us la uffared to them intbiscas© 1* 
mortifying in the extreme. 

Statistics have been published showing 
that whilst the trade uf our city 
last fall was healthy and considerably 


5 


larger than during the corresponding 
season of 1882, when crops were tnucb 
larger and th© country more prosperous, 
the volumo of business of every other citv 
in the Union, excepting St. Louis, for lhe 
same period showed a large decrease. This 
proves beyond controversy lhat our Ex»v>- 
tdtion was of incalculable benefit, and that 
our citizens have never made an investment 
which has brought them such quick and 
ample return. Tho remarkable micros 
which was achieved terrified our competi¬ 
tors, who, for years pa-thive, with impuni¬ 
ty, cried down Louisville, os a ptare mi- 
worthy of being considered a competitor, 
and has taught them to respect and tear us 
Shall wo now again yteld to them and sluk 
Into our former ia-situd© and inertness! 

No, Louisville made a great stride forward 
to tho lea l last fail, and she must now main¬ 
tain her onward course by tbe same spirit of 
progress!veness and enterprise or she will 
drop back far, far beyond the starting point. 
She can not possibly remain stationary, as 
ber competitors, »o badly routed last fall, 
w iff assume tbe aggres ive if she displays 
weakness; she must mov© on or surrender. 

Expositions will be held in all the cities 
that compete for our trade, and the people, 
in the sections tributary to Lo usviile, wifi 
bo induced by "Exposition” rates to pass us 
by, uules* we can, through tbe railroad* 
centering here, give them equal advantages. 
Every une knows that this rein not und will 
not be done unless w© hold au Exposition. 

I itn confident that there is not a man in 
our community who would nut protest with 
all the .power there is in lam agaiuat the 
tearing dowu of tbe magnificent but dings 
and tbe destruction of tbe valuable plant, if 
tho question were submit ted to him in this 
simple form. Yet this i* precisely what will 
be done after tho 15th of tbls month if the 
#50,000 needed or© not subscribed. Th© 
#30u,000 invested will bo scattered to the 
winds, and with it will go our pride nad our 
self-reliance. Tbe >pint of co-operatiou will 
be broken, and many yea re will ©laps© betoro 
any public enterprise con again succeed. 
R tbis, then, not a critical ©ra 
in our city's history’, and is it not 
tbe sacred duty of every one to support her 
while she is faltering, and thnt sbo will not 
be precipitated backward into tbe gulf of 
oblivion, but can move promptly forward 
and onward to abundant prosperity. 

There is but little time left us, and we 
must not wait ono upon the other, hoping 
against hup© that tho money can be rm>©d 
without us. Evei v one must sub»cribe 10 
the extent of In-ability; evory one should 
promptly determine bow tnucb be would 
rather givo than allow th© enterprise to fail, 
uud should then subscribe that amount at 
once. Let us act in the present hour, and 
not wait, until others, who *ro sacrificing 
their time for tbe cause, call on us 
again and a^ain. Let us by good 
example teach our neighbors tbeir duty 
and by* that mean'* help the rau.->e, not only 
with our money, but with our moral sup¬ 
port. 

We must not endeavor to get out ot tbis 
call as cheaply as po-.sit.Je, but min»t come 
forward with a liberal band; w© must look 
upon this as a business expense, just as we 
do upon our store rent, clerk hire, traveling 
expenses, or any Rem which in our opinion 
w ul add to our income in the impulse it will 
give iu our trade. Nearly ail subteriptions 
of #50 and #75. yes, evcuof #UK> and #150, 
on Mam and on Fourth streets, are ridicul¬ 
ous. They simply evidence a disposition to 
alffiw others to pay the fiddler wmRt we 
dunce. Refusals to subscnlie are not even 
entitled tocrlticl&m; they should Ihj a brand of 
spume. No one can conscientiously sav that be 
bos no interest in th© Exposition, that it has 
not benefited him. Tutu which help* tuo 
community at large prospers each individ¬ 
ual. Tbe employer and the employe, lb© 
landlord and tho tenant, the banker and the 
depositor are nil co-detxKidoiu, and the pros 
pei ity of tu© one surelv help* tho other. 
Tueti let us all resulvo that we must act. and 
let us act promptly. Let us nmk* coo l our 
determination that th** magnificent building* 
of our Exposition shall stand; that wo will 
give them permanence by owning the 
ground upon which they stand, and that by 
tbl* means we will enable tbe directory to 
still further ndvauce the Interests of’our 
city, of our .State and of tho South. 

Merchant. 


OLD liJCKOUY. 


An Account or Ibe Attempt to Rill President 
Jarkson. 

1(*7j aften 007/1 /Vmocaf.] 

Andrew Jackson trad many bitter enemies. 
Being naturally a man of. violent temp r. he 
had never learned to control himself, and iu 
tbe disetrargo of his official duty he had been 
compelled to give great otfen.se to many who 
honortiy differed flora buu. Hi© first veto of 
tbu bank 1*1 IR and his prompt inea-ures to 
put down nullification had lutlumed the pas¬ 
sion of bi* political opponents. Many said 
and believed that ho w ns ruining tbe coun¬ 
try. and ho aggravated the teelmgs against 
him by bis unyielding and imperious man¬ 
ner. 

A Mr. Randolph, who bad been a Lieuten¬ 
ant iu the navy, nud bad been cashiered, at¬ 
tempted to pull President Jackson’s nose pub¬ 
licly, and, report says, more than half sue 
ceedt-d. At least the President's face was 
covered with blood. His pride was wound¬ 
ed in this case, but there was uo actual dan¬ 
ger. 

"Had I known,’’ said Jackson, "that Ran¬ 
dolph stood liefuro rue, I should have been 
nreputed, and I could have defended myself. 
No villain ever escaped me before, aud bu 
would not tad it not been for iny confined 
posurt/n.” [The President was sealed ra an 
arm-chair wuen attacked.] 

Far more si-nous wus tho attempt ma le 
upon the President’s life January BO, 18&>. 
On that day tbo President aud his Cabinet 
and both houses of CN>ngrea< met ra the hall 
of th© House of Representatives to take part 
in tbe tuneral ceremonies of 11 deceased mem¬ 
ber of Congress fiom .south Carolina. As the 
President, near th© head of the procession, 
was pasdng out from the rotunda of the 
C'api.ol ami was about to enter tue porttco. a 
man stepped out of tbo crowd, and. 
standiug not eight feet from tue Presi¬ 
dent, leveled a pistol at him and 
pulled th© trigger. The cap missed 
fire. The man instantly drew a eecoud 
pistol from under his cloak and again tn.d 
to shoot. But the second cap also mis.*ed 
tire. President Jackson rushed furiously at 
tbe assavun with uplittmi cane, and would 
have felled him to the ground, but before he 
could reach the man Lieut. Gedny, of the 
navy, had knocked hltu dowu, and he was 
speedily secured. Th© prisoner, who was nu 
English house-painter, named Lawrence Por¬ 
ter, explained his motive in word.'* which ap¬ 
ply w ith singular aptness to the case of tue 
w retched Guite&u. 

Heuriug on ulJ sides that the country bad 
been ruined by tho measures of Geu. Jack- 
son, the project of n^a-hinatiog him had 
fastened itself in bis crazy mind. Thephysi- 
cram* who examined him 1 ©ported: 

"He stated that, believing the President to 
be the source of all bis difficulties, be was 
still fixed 111 bis purpose to kill him, and, if 
hi* successor pursued the same course, to put 
him out of th© way also.” 

Lawrence was placed in an asylum. The 
insinuation* of the tifo/nr that ho was lb** 
agency of a conspiracy obtained no gourral 
confidence. But Jackson him«df always in- 
sRtt-d that abler minds than Lawrence's trad 
hulLuted tbo uksuiiII. Mis* Mart menu, who 
Witnessed tho ceremonies end hud a confused 
view- of tbo exciting *cuno when the Pre*itl<-»t 
was shot at. writes in b»r "Retrospect of 
Western Travel:” 

"When I did go to the White House I took 
the bnefeat po^ibiu notice, to tho President 
of th© *m*-niu attempt’ ot Lawrence, but the 
word aroused his ire. He nrotested in the 
presence ot many strangers, that there was 
110 intartiiy in the case. I was silent, of 
course. He protested that there was a plot, 
and that tbo man wiu a t«*ol, aud at la*»t quot¬ 
ed th© Attorney General as ins authority. It 
was palufui to hear a chief ruler publicly 
trying to persuade a foreigner that any of 
his constituents hated him to tbo death, aud 
I took tho liberty to change Lbe subject.” 

Geu. Jaoksou, to his dying hour, suspected 
Georg© Poindexter, of .'ui-feissippi, of having 
participated in th© uttempt to us&ustnnte 
Liui, but few, if auy, oven ot bis owu parti¬ 
sans, shared m this suspicion. 

U bm Ft l£hi* n**«J lit© Loudon Copa. 

[ it a©/it»w7/<>n Rroutdlcun .J 

The package discovered by the London 
police at Paddington station «m loaded w.tu 
a block of dynarait ', a time-clock exol^img 
contrivance, aud a copy of the New York 
Sun, The policemen stood tbe discovery ot 
th© dvuoiuueand machine witu equanimity, 
but ited howling with terror when toe 
Iruculeiit-lookiug Sun was uncovered colled 
up iu the coruor of tho package. 

Our Grocrapltv »«> Br ( hanged. 

{.Vc»© York Tl’cr/ii.J 

Henry Irving's latest utterance about 
America is tb it he is much in iov© with 
the country, especially with Chicago, but 
that he thinks tin? distances from on© point 
to another altogether too great, and bts jour¬ 
neys havo been long aud tiresome- It is 
proposed to bring tb© cities closer together in 
tun© for his next Auiericau engagement. 


LOCA L NOT ICES. 

I*ala la ilia Bark. 

Ha©© you rain la small ot the bark* ft Is roar 
kidneys. Wmtcr*uitth** llucuu and Pareira Bra 
▼a will relieve you. 

Ur. Wllltor'a < (id- Liter Oil mid Lime —Inva¬ 
lids n»*e I no longer dread to take that great spe¬ 
cific fo.* Consumption, A* hum and tut eaten.ug 
Coughs—Cod-14*er*Oil and Lime. As prepared 
by br. Wdbor It Is robbedof the nausea ling (rv«te. 
an l hIt. embodies a prep .ration of tf.e Phos¬ 
phate of Lime, giving nature the very article re¬ 
quired tn aid th© healing qualities of the Oil. and 
ra re-creat© where disease h.va destroy' d It also 
forma a remarkable tonic, acd will cause weak 
and debilitated per-.on* 10 become *ironr and ro¬ 
bust. It should be kept in every family for in¬ 
stant use on tbo first appe irance of Coughs or 
Irritation of the Lungs. M»rau actured ©nly by 
A. B. Wtlbor, CheiuUt, boston. Sold by all 
druggists. 

It I* more economical to huy Darker** Salad 

Dressing tbnn It t« to mnke a d esslnr. Besides 
this, it is made of better maten.il' than you can 
buy at the stores. Everybody likes it. Try it. 

Dr. Wlntersm (la's Liter Pills.—This |« the 
season of the year when the system should i>» 
thorough!'* purged of the humor* which crests 
disease There is no purgAtfto or catlisrtio so 
mild aud efficacious as Doctor Wintersuiith*i 
bug&r-coatcd Liver Pill-*—causing neither uaus© 1 
nor griping paint, as is ihe case with tat orJinv 
ry cheap paieut p.lls o the day. most of whic 1 
are composed ot caio nel or mercury, ani car©* 
less!) prepared bv inexperience ! per*aat 


DEATHS. 

SMlfB-On tlie 8 t)i inst.TYt 7:1 j x. m.. .Mollis 
W . youngest daughter uf Jane C. aud tn© Ule 
J. R brnttn. 

Funeral nt 10 a m. Monday, 10th Inst., from 
rer-idence of her uncle, Capt. Damon. Burial 
private. 

SHOEMAKER—Mtrch 9. a*. 9 o'clonk a. m.. 
G&nnaz. sou of Louis and TiUie Shoemaker, aged 
5 days 

SMITH-At8 o’clock Welnrsday morning, at 
the nreulenc- of her s<>udn-law. L M. I Umraoy, 
Mi* Dani 1 . hjciiu, of blight's tlircavc. lu lb© 
list year of b - r age. 

Funeral *• ill take place at the Cathedral at 10 
o'clock Mond. 1 y morning Friends of th© family 
•re invited to utt >ud. 


OBITUARY. 

Timdrathof Mr* HrjifunTA Palxcm Surra, 
on tue morning 01 th© hut Insutut, ba» created a 
prof rand impression ohc had beeu in failing 
health for m.,ny months, aud had 1 een scr.omdy 
ill lor *ev»-i*al wt-ek*. It had been known tbr 
sum© time itial perfect restoration was not to be 
exprciMl, i»ut h.-r family ami numerous in ends 
cun Inued to hope teat she might he spared to 
them for a w tiil© longer. During the l ist two 
weeks of br-r life It became apparent that her 
spirit wui smites ling to dbrnso*© ii>elf fiorn us 
buddy tenomeut uml was pteparlng lu wrag its 
flight Imo eternal light, 'ihe © losing scenes uf 
her earthly career were the crow ning glory «.f a 
lung, t^ei.nul and noble life. Boro of dtstin- 
gunned family, she hud in a high degree tbo 
lccling "noblesse oblige. ’* 

Calb-d while qui e young to aaatimo tb© respon¬ 
sibilities n:vi cures of a wtf* itvi mother, ber 
alrougch .racter quickly developed and exp >n 1 
ed. Couraga, energy aud unwav ring fidelity to 
duty were IU most marked f>n!urr* It is hut 
rarely one may wUncss *ueh devotion t-» dutr, 
such forgetfulne** of j*. if. o» unccnbcioutdy i4o*- 
suruad out Irdo her daily life. These node qual¬ 
ities made her home beautiful and bound her 
f.milly to h- r by ties of ten^.eiesi aflVcilon. Her 
friendship nnu atreusth governed all w ho cam© 
w n tun the sphere of tier influence, 
yel her ftwerinetu ot d[»po%illon and 
gcut.onesa of manner were such that 
ad ,Melded ciieerful and loving oLohonc© 
to her will. The religious element strongly pre¬ 
dominated in her nature. From early y*ratli ah© 
had been connected w ith on© of inv oxttvmest 
sect-, but fulled to find In it n religion- atmos- 
phrre congenial ra her spirit. In searching ter 
truth ibe became ponertufiy att'S- te 1 by the 
beauty nnd glories of ihe catholic faith, and, 
after prolonged and thorough instruction in i’s 
dnctnnr-s. she was r drived into the Catholic 
C'nurcb by the lat© L isnop Reynold*, uf th * 
diocese. From that day, now forty-four year* 
ago. she was a most devoied and exemplary 
Catholic ller beau ifuI faitb lent a new ebanit 
to her young and vigorous fife, hy endowing it 
with liighn an l no'Jer mo Ives, and Imbuiug it 
wiih greater spiritual force. 

UvoiJon to tier rofi.doh made her more than 
ever faithful to hercugiostng dutien as wile and 
mot her. She possessed lira remai saul© gift of 
harmonising duile* which in utauy ocin-r*appear 
to cludi. l be early uiorulng ho ir usually found 
her *i tintss, no matter how cold or unpropi- 
tioua th© weather. .Sh«* prodded over her huge 
hou-e and numerous family with rare wisdom 
and se ll Tb© clergy nev©i found more generuU* 
bcepnality nor a warmer welcome than In her 
brigm aud happy nome. She and her exc ilr-nt 
hu band Writ* always foremast lu every kiud and 
cli rdable enterprise. The poovaud unprotected, 
the unfortunate and oppr i»'d vere sure to tind 
iu tier a sympathising rriend and an effective 
helper. 

During her long aud eventful life she had many 
sorrows ami sufiend much. At her busbsiid s 
death she found herself ubllscd to assume tne 
sol© charge of the management of th© c»Ul© and 
the ©dmathiii nf a hug© family. The happy 
motherof 14 children, she was dcMined to en¬ 
dure the ngMiy of folio win/ 10 of them to tbe 
grave. Butin all hvr iriaD. in the d©*-t>©*t sor¬ 
rows of her fife, h-r spirit shone nvbh purer 
light. She ••rag 1 a and round strength in God. 
and His hand -uratiued ber. VV it* te r drenched 
eye and trembling lip, hcriramt all nut broken, 
and he soul bowed to Ihe very earth hy hvr 
heavy buM> n. she could yet look up ra heav«*u 
and M»y, ••Fwther. thy will, not mine, be done." 

Rigorously exacting wlin here©If. sue was ever 
lenu ut with the laults of othrts. Mi© could find 
excuses for everyone's shortcomings save her 
own, yet non© had less than she. 

During her lung and painful illnes* she never 
murmured or coinplniot-d; no Impstlent word 
ever ©kcapwl her lip«. When anxious frtund-« 
express d to h**r the hoj>© of her recovery to 
h©uhIt. she replied. - I have resigned myself to 
tho will of Gu«l." When sU4 perceived bar chil¬ 
dren'a grief aL her Approaching death she ex¬ 
claimed, '’My children. I am in the hand of God, 
an l am aatisrtwl: so must you also b.’. ’’ 

bbe D nre.l only to offend her Cited, and con¬ 
tinued almost up to the la-t thos© rvligous prac¬ 
tices which had nlled her m<‘AMtre of happiness 
In touth, sustained her in the sorrow* and weari¬ 
ness of old age and advanced her in tho path of 
virtue and holiness 

Sun ounded by loving anti devoted children, 
who. by ceaseless and unwearied attention aud 
tne most tender care, showed themselves worthy 
daughters uf their noble mother; tonified by 
tue Licrnmonu and pious practices of th© Holy 
Church, r-he fell asleep und is ac rest. 

Her faith wa> sublime: Its p.w rand Inflnenco , 
upon all w ho had tb« privilege of conversing with 
ber during there last days were deeply folt. U 
pcrrm-Ated her whole uuing. illumined aud ele- I 
va ©d It. 

Thu* has pissed a way to her reward a nohle , 
woman, a devoted wife anl mother, a true aud 
affeciio me friend, u loyal Catholic, a spirit 
adorned with oil the Christian graces, aahtniug 
example tu the Cimrwh which sit© so deany 
loved, a bltttsln/ lu the community where ©he 
was lieloved and revered. 

R quieecat in pa c/ • • • 


MEETINGS. _ 

A • A.', S. *. R.-.—Union ho l go ot a 

*Y. • Perfection, No, a, will convene 
in Ci'U-wst.trial Cfinmu rs. Mo* »uJc Tmi TCaT 
pi©, this iMou lay) evening, at 7Vg o'clock, ' ▼ \ 
in stated • omnumteauou. ltuu.pt arid full si¬ 
te n lance requested. WM. RYAN, 33" M. 

Jas A. bmtHCLU 3C* Sec y, _ 

'I 'HE LODGE OF ANTIQUITY. No. Ua, a 
1 K. aud A. M.. will un- t iu stated 
ciuumunlc itlotj n*. their hall in Mmunk 
Temple riii- (Uondnv) evening, March' ▼ ' 
10. Duvi, ul 7id0 o clock Work in one nf the 
(icgnrex. Lirciurrn uf si -ter ludce* t oniially ami 
IntlcrnullT invited, nn 1 m ■ 1 ■ •** requ »u*J to 
Attend. R. H. THOMPSON. W. M. 

Sk W. I). STONt. Sec'y. 


B1TTEK8, 



The want of a 
reliable dluriictic 

which, while act- 
it g a* a •ramulunt 
Of thu kidneys, net 
liier exchc* t.or ir¬ 
ritates tut m. wus 
long dace -applied 
by II os te tiers 
Ftomach Biters. 
1 rtis fine in dle.ne 
exerts tbe requDite 
di g rite ot stimula¬ 
tion upon these or* 
gnn» without pro- 
during Irritation, 
and !►, then-lote. 
far better Adapted 
for the purpose 
.baa uuuu-ificau-tl 
I excitant* of?-»n re- 
" snrte*d to Dyspep¬ 
sia, fever anil ago© 
an' f kln-lrerl dteea-«-«. sr© all cured by '. 

For ?ei*e hv dnmri«t< 'r>d ioaiors gecrrailjr. 
se 10 dMoW©Fr^Snl y£\rl y 


s 


PIAN OS, ETC. _ 

5^t PIANOS 

IUNZEJi & ROSEA', 

HAMTACrvarna or 

UPRIGH T AND SQUARE PIANOS 


.MISCELLANEOUS. 


ELECTRIC-LIGHT SOAP 

I** Tilt Itr.A r. Itieulre mf yiimr Gi-Mtr. 

ELECTPICSOAPM»F'CCO.Inolani: 0 oll»,lntl. 

■ mrlO Mo VrASal.Afi , 


Notice, 

M RS M C. MILLER who is also known cut 
Mrs Kate (’rook*it, is no 1 *nger in mv ©m- 
pluymenu L. B, NUGLN f. Fourth nv#.. Louie- 
vUle, Ky._ imii TnSaSuMakwl 

WOODLAND GARDEN. 

r PIIIS extensive garden U now ready for rant 
JL fora ter n iff years. IL W. WuOLLEtf. 

fcld dyaSului 

STAINED CLASS 

GEO. A. BOWEN. 

184 IT. f ourth St., Cl.Xt iy\ATJ,OHTQ 
Ordere taken for interior househol 1 and ercte. 
slasilcal tJm-rautiona. _ jai MvVdtFIf 

MEXICAN 

HAMMOCKS! 

WHITE AND COLORED. 

Standard weight and size, and for vale In lota to 
*rait pureh vsera. Imported by 

WINTIIUOP, CUNXLNHMAM * SONS. 

1 i' ,“*’• Front Sl , FhiladciphiA. 

Ja 2 .% Frit Mo 10 

L. b'JL'L Vv Axtr's) 

Frankfort Lottery of Kentucky. 

CI.aSS 175-Ma»cb 8. lHft*. 

40 l 76 34 7 3ti 50 fil Jb 77 33 8 

CLaS> no. 

45 34 23 30 25 53 GO 18 28 5 33 31 6 
33» and 341 Wxat Maoxct St. 
Thla Companr doaa uo buaincca thiougb iha 
United State' MnIN. * 


LOTTERY. 


CAPITAL Pit 1/.!•’. ft75.000. 

TICKETS ONLY $5. SHARES IN PROPORTION 



Louisiana State LotteryCo. 

"We do Irarebr certify that we •tipervia* the 
arrangement* for all th© Monthly and Semi- An¬ 
nual Drawing* of the Lo.mUana State Lottery 
Company, and tn peraon ra intge aud control iho 
drawings theaukdvea, and that the anm- am coq- 
ducted with houeciy, (alrucaa. a«»d in good fafib 
toward all pirtie*. nnd w© aurborla© the Compa¬ 
ny to tula cartiflcate. with fac Aimilev of our 
signatures attached. In its adverusemeuts ” 



Incorporated in 18<J8 for J*» years hy the Legla- 
turn for Ld 11 cat tonal anl Charitable piupo-es-- 
wlth a capital of 1.IMO.OOO—to wnicb a rraerva 
fund of uvf-r fi50.U>0 bn' fine© been added. By 
au overwheiming popular vote lu fmocldsa was 
made a part of tho present State Constltulluu, 
oth*pt©\i Dec. V. A. u., thin. 

T<tr onln L >itvr y eo, r c-jfed on and indorsed 
by the people nf ny t te It iiew satin or 
pottp’nir* lu t.ramJ Mu^le Number Draw. 
!»•«• ndie ©Ince m i-iihly. 

A isPLKMilt* Oi l OJITl.MTY TO \MT 
A I t>M n u:. T r I IK,. teivAND DRAWING. 

class c. in the academy of music: kP 

ORLE\NS,TUESDAY. March' 1 1 , Iksi-lG«th 
Monthly Drawing. 


Capital Prize &75 OOO. 

tOOyOua tirk-rts nt hire Dntlore Knots, 
h ructions, in ft [thn, in proportion. 
LIST or I*(UZCS. 


1 CAPITAL PRIZE... 
1 CAPITAL BRIZE . 

1 CAPITAL PRIZE - 

2 1'iUZES of ^>.0U0 
5 l'iOZES of 2,000. 

10 PRIZESoL J .000 
:.t) PRIZES nW &00 

1UU FR.ZEtt of *,»0d. 

3t»0 i'Ri/f.S of IOO 

5t-0 FRIZES of 50 

LOUU FRIZES ot 


S'VOOO 

■ 

.. ib.UOO 
.. J-,000 
.. 1 ii.oOO 
.. j(i,ooo 

.. lu.uoO 
.. 2th00d 
. 30.000 

. U.V000 
- L5.000 


AreaoxiUATto.x rnizxa. 

0 Appruxlniatton Vrizenot $730. 0.750 

l» AutKO'lmnuoii Rrhrtuof 5uu. 4,500 

U Approximation of 2. r »0. vV-ffiO 


Prize*, amounting to.... .f%»i l *»..\qq 

Application for rates to clubs -dioul t be mada 
onlv 10 the Office uf tue coiupatiy iu New Orleans. 

For further infurutau ra write clearly, gi.mg 
fi ll address. Make P. O. Money orders payable 
and uddresa reg»s ert*d letter* te 
NEW OHLKAVJi MIIOVU B%\«i. 

.New OrteaiiB, 

POSTAL NOTES and ordluao' letter* by .Mail 
or Lxprea, (all sums uf >> aud upward bv Eg. 
pr©»» at. our expetreo; to .'I. HU ili’IN, 

.V-w Or.can .. L i.. 

or M. A. DU PIIIN*, 

GU7 HiMcntli St., Wniijlnsinii, D. C, 

or JOE E. KIFFIN, 400 West Market %t.. I .an 
biville. Ky. fel-iThSuJtTuAw4w 


SCALES. 


Slioylj 6 s In Ever/ family 

To give our Daily reader* the benefit nf 
some of the useful premiums offered 
Weekly subscribers, this excellent house¬ 
hold necessity is placed ou sale at the 
CouitLEit-Joi hnal counting-rooms. 
PRICE M 00. 

The Little Detective 

-OR- 

1IOUSKKEEPEKS 5 SCALE. 



Die r©pty?Sfnuii afjove weigh? accurately 
anything from h ot. to2olbx It t* made with 
steel tMarm^a and a bras' beam. Just tbo tblag 
for tbe nouM or office. It is u belter scale loan 
Ixs freequendy been offered at t vice and even 
three times the money. 

The Scale can not be sent by mall, but will be 
by us u-atly boxed and tmippel by Erpresi to 
such Expr»-*s office as tho subscriber may di¬ 
rect. The suhs-'t iber nnuf pay the expreesayeon 
delivery. Remit to us by money order or r.;^i'- 
tcred letter Addrese 

CoMier-Joarnal Company, Louisville, Ky. 


CltAB OHCUAliD SALTS. 



BEST SIEDICINE IN THE WOiU^D 
J’or Disorder* of the Siomnofs t Liwer nnd 
Kldury*. 

'"|X> be aetmrrl of getting the reaulne arrtols, 
1 a' * 3 r ur druggist for Lie "Crab Apple** 
trade mark as aivjv©. put up la Idc anl C5o 
reah-d pcUWI'-box p.'ckace* by the Crib 
tuvnnrd bpriix;* and rkdu Co.. «f Loilv 
ville. Ky.. who are now the .sole owners o< all 
tb*. genuine c rab OrcuarJ Sails tnoJe. .Votte of 
lltttr n t ,v*» be Obtained i t bulk nr . n *ottle$. 
The great virtue of ibis hiohi valuable methcioe 
hu- can — J tt to be e:iteu-lvriv coonterf«ut 4 ti. 
Prolutbly over nine-tooth* of wbiit 1 * eOernl no 
the taaruet a. jit a* i'rab i>rch«r»J rail- .«re 
sue imitation*, lira vender* ot which will bo 
prosecuted tu the fuileftt «-Xt©UL mr-lkUtVt! 

~OLD PAPERS^ 


\ LSO dealer* in Organ* and all kinds of amail 
muMical inatrutnont* Mitd 5-cvnt »ne©t music. 
N o. 41 U Market <t.. ne.tr Fourth, Louisville, Ky. 
£ 4 F~ritciory Lightcentb and Urarson i(A 


FOE SALE 

AT THIS OFFICa 
































































































THE COURIER-JOURNAL: LOUISVILLE, MONDAY, MARCH 10. 1884. 


6 


BARRETT'S BLAST. 

CoL John P. Barrett, of Hartford, Ky., Bine* to a 
Point of Order and Makes a Very Per¬ 
sonal Explanation About 


THAT PARLOR-CAR INCIDENT. 


A reporter of the Courier-Journal met 
Mr. John P. Barrett, of Hertford, Kv., in the 
city last evening, and in response to a question 
regarding the suit brought by him nguiust 
the Louisville ami Nashville Railroad Com¬ 
pany for damages for ejectment from a par¬ 
lor car on ono of their trains, he made the 
following statement: 

The interview with a prominent official of 
the L. and N. R. R. Co., as published in your 
issue of the 5th in&t., contains gross misrep¬ 
resentations and puettivu falsehoods* which 
do mo great injustice aud are calculated to 
prejudice my course of action, and were 
probably given for that purpose. The facts 
are briefly these: The L. end N. R. R. Co. 
is indebted to me for advertising in the Hart¬ 
ford Herald, done at their Instance and re¬ 
quest, to bo paid for in travel over its lines 
of road. Ou the 23d ult., I called on Mr. 
C. P. Ataiore for n ticket to Cincinnati and 
return, on account of said iidvoi tuiug, at the 
time returning him a trip ticket to the 
same point, issued last fall on same account, 
which I bad not used for want of opportu¬ 
nity until it had expired, it being good to 
the end of 1883 only. 

Mr. Atmore said that that business had beou 
transferred to Vice President Smith. I called 
at Mr. Smith’s office for him. and a gentle¬ 
man whom I supposed to be Mr. Smith re¬ 
sponded and asked what I desired. I briefly 
told him. He said ho did not know any¬ 
thing about former advertising, und had 
no contract with me for this year; 
did uot then wish to make any, 
but might at some future time; but* sug¬ 
gested that I go back to Mr. Atmore, who 
knew me and knew of former arrangements, 
and h<* could i«>uo me a trip pass, which 
would answer my puriMso. I did as direct¬ 
ed, and Mr. Atmoro issued the trip pass. 
On tho 24th ult. I took the train for Cin¬ 
cinnati, and a sent in the parlor car. When 
the conductor called for tickets I handed him 
the pass; be tore off the part carrying me to 
Cincinnati and gave me the return part. 
He then called for a parlor-cnr ticket. I 
told him 1 had none; did not know 
it was necessary, that 1 thought all through 
passengers were entitled to seats in that cur 
without extra charge. The conductor said 
that all persons having through tickets pur¬ 
chased got free seats m that car, but assured 
me that his instructions wore to collect DO 
cents from each passenger traveling on a 
ticket like mine, aud l paid hi in 50 cents: 
but there was no higgling about it, as stated 
by the promiuont official. On the afternoon 
ot the 26 tb uit. i returned, and at tho depot 
in Cincinnati 1 purchased a parlor-car 
ticket from the depot agent and paid 
him 50 cents therefor. To© statement of 
the prominent official thatl assured the depot 
agent that l lmn a &i>l-ciu*s ticket und thus 
secured the parlor-car ticket free is an abso¬ 
lute and positive falsehood, made out of 
whole cloth, for I did uot utter one word to 
him about what kind of a ticket I bud. or 
that I had any at all. I called on Uuu for a 
$ 6,000 accident insurance for one duy 
aud a parlor ticket ami handed turn 
a $5 bill. He gave mo two accident 
policies for $3,000 each for one day each and 
a parlor-car ticket aud $4 in cbnug •. Every 
agent that ever sold a traveler's accident tick¬ 
et, and every passenger that ever bought one 
knows that a $3,000 accident ticket iur one 
day soils for twcutv-flve cents, and the state¬ 
ment by the prominent official that I paid 
fifty cents each for the tickets L siraplv at>- 
suid. If the stulis in the agent’-office at 
Cincinnati cleariv show that % aid’ftity cents 
each for the ticket.-, they do not show the 
facts, for my recollection ml ear and poult ve 
that I mud but twenty-live cents each iur 
them. 1 took m 3 ’ seat in the parlor car, 
and when the conductor came round for 
tickets he took up my re;urn ticket. 1 then 
handed him my par or car ticket, which he 
accepted, but afterward cal It' l for 50 rent*. 

I a-kt-d wbut for. and ho said for a seat in 
the parlor-car. I called his attention to the 
ti< ket 1 had handed mm. Alter some besitit 
tion he raid it was not good, not I mu; a pay 
parlor-car ticket. 1 told him that I had paid 
for it just the same. 1 in* he disputed, and 
accused me of procuring it through fraud. 

1 resented this in-ult by pronouncing the 
arcu»atiuu an infauiou* falsehood, and I here 
reiterate it. I do not practice irand' at 
all, much lea- for the pitiful sum of fifty 
cents. Just then a gentleman in the cal* 
told the conductor that he saw me buy nud 
pay for the ticket. The conductor then left 
me. saying he would telegraph the agent 
about it. When about halfway to Louis¬ 
ville, he came to me und said that,lie li id 
beard from the agent,, who informed him 
that lie bad not sold nm .a ticket. I told him 
that he hud, aud 1 could prove it bv a fit-in¬ 
terested witness rigid then and there; but 
that the ticket protected him anyway, even 
if 1 procured it through fraud, as ho alleged, 
and that in sui u an event 1 was 
liable to prosecution for felony for procuring 
it under false pretenses. He said bis orders 
were positive, and he must have fifty cents 
then and there. 1 declined to pas it, but 
said that 1 knew Hon. Lyitlrtdn Cooke, as¬ 
sistant, attorney for tho company, and sotue 
of the other official-, .uid would go with bun 
to the officials, and if they held 1 dm for fifty 
cents for my ride in that car 1 would give 
him fifty cents, and I would settle the matter 
with them. This ho refused. 1 then of 
fered to deposit fifty coots with 0113 * pas¬ 
senger he might select, which was to be iia:d 
to him iu the event that the company held 
him nnponsible for my ride in the car. This 
he refused and 1 refused to pay. He then 
ordered me out of the car; I refused to go. 
He went back into the rear car and, as 1 nm 
informed, unued himself and brought two 
negroes with him ami again ordered me out. 

I refused aud caught hold of ibe anus 
of the chair The conductor caught me 
by the right arm and one of the negroes by 
the left arm, and both begun jerking and 
pulling quite violently , and kept it. up tid 
my hold wa.-» broken, and’then jerked me 
out into the aisle mid started out with me. 
When about middle way of the car u gentle¬ 
man offered me liL scat, saying that I might 
occupy it and hu would g - imo th»* ilhcr car. 
I thanked him And accepted his kindly 
offer, but the couductor refused and moved 
me on. 

I then asked to return and get my bag¬ 
gage. which the conductor refused, saving 
be would h*um it in to me. Ar tue dour lgofc 
u good hold of the lacing, and worried them 
a little before they g.4 me loose, and on tue 
plutiorm 1 seized b"!d ox tho brakes, and an¬ 
other iu»m(* tftiinUed, but, being overpowered, 
they fluady lauded me m the next car und 
sinned ino uoXt the stove, and tho 
conductor ordered uie to sit there 
and m»t go back in the other car at 
my peril. A n yr brought my vali-o 
in and sstitdow u ue..r me, but never brought 
ray overcoat. I uever anything m the 
parlor-car aliout a suit tor damage* ar stated 
by (hesaid prominent otli. ial, but some one 
of tht- |ni>'seni:ei> advised me to -uc the cum- 
pany if t::o conductoi t-.uk nus out. The 
sc#t I was placed in, being iwar tho stove. I 
got quite wui m, aud by tue time we reached 
Louisville 1 was quite weary. The fcmai did 
not run into the depot' on an tint ,.f 
some trouble on tho track, 1 understood, 
but slopped a sluirt distance en©t ot 
the head pf^Jefferson street. When the wor l 
was given, ‘All out for Louisville. v 1 t >«*k 
my valise and got out, and. not being able 
to procure a hack or omnlhus, I had to w ilk 
to the bend of Market »D • t und watt a while 
for a si net car to get down to the hotel. 
The night a r wo* crisp null chill, nud, com 
ingout of a hot car without an overcoat, 
and being out in the night air so long, caused 
me to take a severe cold. 

“There is not one word of truth in tv 
statt-meuL of ©aid prominent officini that r • 
porter brought my overcoat touie an.i 
I refused to accept .t, fur 1 Mover-saw it an 
•r the conductor and negroes seised me and 
started out of the parlor cur w itU tue, an i I 
have not seen it yet. The porter ha.- never 
&pek»n to me since ho brought me ray vulbe. 
1 have not vet recovered fn»:u the violent 
jeiking. assault and cxcltcmt-UL and severe 
cold contracted. 

“These are the plain, unvnrnbhxl facts, 
which can and will l*? shown on the trial of 
the cause. I have traveled n great deal in 
my life, and in nearly all kinds of public 
conveyances, and n .vor had any trouble be¬ 
fore. much less insulted, assaulted aud eject¬ 
ed from a car.** 


street, last evening about 7 o’clock. He was 
ordered to give up his money, and on refus¬ 
ing to do so was knocked down aud bis silver 
watch and $5 in money taken. His assail¬ 
ants decamped, without their victim having 
any idea of ttieir identity. Ho was not much 
hurt, and declined giving the affair to the 
lice, saying that he desired to avoid pub- 

ic.ty. __ __ 

THE HAIL HO ADS. 


I?« 


The Krs Clearing •iioiine of < nmml«« 1 oner 
Fink— Relation of Pool* to Monopolies. 

Mr. Webster Snyder, recent General 
Manager of the Louisville, Evansville and 
St. Louis railroad, has, as will be seen by 
the following, commenced Ins duties in a 
like position in Texas: 

Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway. Gal- 
yt-*ton. fob. 29 —Mr. John Seitl.r having re 
signed as Manuger, Mr. Webster Bnyder ha© 
been elected by the Board of Ptrrctur* to fill the 
position of iteueral Manager and Chief Engineer 
of this company, to takeeff**ct March 1. 

Heads of d> partments and employes will re¬ 
spect hut authority accordingly. 

Geo. Sealy. I’resident. 

\ India navalit Journal.] 

Mr. Fink’s proposed plan for a clearing¬ 
house is as follows: 

“The present manner of making settle¬ 
ment* where frefeht passes over more than 
one road is both unbu*ine*«.-like and un¬ 
wieldy, nud makes a vast amount of unnec¬ 
essary labor, which would bo saved by a 
clearing-huu-e. For instance, a piece ^ of 
freight comes from Indianapolis to New 
York, we will say, over the C leveland. Co¬ 
lumbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis, the 
Lnke 8 hore and the Now York Central mil- 
roads. At the starling point the through 
rate is fixed and the pro ratu share of each 
of tbo-u three roads is determined The first 
change is made at Cleveland, and there the 
agent of the Cleveland, Columbus. Cincin¬ 
nati and Indianapolis tak*s out hi© share of 
the proceeds and hands over the balance to 
the Lake Shore ageut. At Buffalo 
tho Lake Shore agent effects a 
corresponding settlement with tho Lake 
Shore man. If, iu tho course of 
n month, one thousand pieces of freigbr are 
transported over these lines from in-liana pu¬ 
li* to New York two thousand settlements 
are made. Were there a clearing-house the 
Indianapolis agent would seud its duplicate 
way-bills: the prorata share would all be ad¬ 
justed in a lump and a single Heitlemont 
would take ti.e place of tho two thousand 
separata ones. Clearing-house paj>er would 
bo issued iu favor of Mien roads as had a bal¬ 
ance to be paid. In brief, system would ako 
the place of chaos. You cau easily see what 
a check there would be upon the different 
comj'Hines. For all through business a double 
system of way-bills, ticket-stills, el., would 
have to be employed, the duplicates to go to 
the clearing-house. Then there would be a 
double audit to all through budness, the 
clearing-house audit checking that of the 
railroads, and the hitter counter-checking the 
clearing-house. ’ ’_ 

NOTES. 


Knocked Ifimn nm! Robbed. 

A man named Andrew Johnson was as¬ 
saulted by ruffians on Hancock, near Green 


J. L. Whelan, formerly Louisville 
Agent of the L., N. A. and C. railroad, but 
at present representing the same company 
at Chicago, was tu the cit 3 * yesterday. 

The Harlow Wilson troupe went to 
Chicago yesterday over the Mon >n road. 
The Grau Opera Company will come from 
tho Lake©ule to-dav by the same road. 

Col Thomas H. Watteuson, the well- 
known nud popular traveling agent of the 

L. and N. ruilroad. with headquarters at 
Lynchburg, Vu., is in the city, stopping at 
tne Fifth avenue Hotel. He arrived yester¬ 
day morning having iti charge uu entire ear- 
load of emigrants from Southwestern Vir¬ 
ginia who are en route to Nebraska. Mr. 
WaUcrsoii will return i turned lately. 

FOOLS AND MONOPOLY, 
llktbbmy Register. ] 

Pbol§ bare a tendency to prevent monop¬ 
oly. The petulant and btatunt enemies of 
the railways forgot this when they so per¬ 
sistently clamor against these compacts 
which are so beneficial m every way. They 
show their ignorance at the same tim*», for 
they ciiticise what they do not understand. 
It there ere no pooltujj agreements then a 
free fight for business would follow, result¬ 
ing otum in the open wor in which the 
weaker would go to the wull aud the strong 
would become stronger. It is easy to see 
that it a new road between two points is 
opened to cutiqiete with an old line and a 
strife f'*r supremacy follow* too older is apt 
to come out best and either absorb the 
weak oue or drive it into bankruptcy. But 
under tl»e pooling *y*t<sm tho u w road 
would receive an agreed proportion of the 
business and Into would prosper. t*n ier 
the comp*ntion, ra es would i>e gradually 
lowered. Tiie public would have t » fmy 
tixed rates, and m»t one price to-day win! 
wnother to-nioiTow, which is the bune of 
business. It is better tur tne people u* have 
com pvt lug line- prus|>vrous by rea-ou of 
pools than for war to itu-vsil ending, t»y the 
law of survival at the titt^t, in tb© >tronge»t 

... in.’ l- mawter Mid more f a mouop- 

oly than ever. The unnecessary multiplying 
of ro«ds, while iu one sense Lettered by a 
possibility of obtaining a share in the pools, 
would lit* mule much more common if pools 
did not exist. 

'TIIE T. AND L. ASSEMBLY. 

Proceeding* of Hip Regular Mor.ilily illrptlns. 

The Trades and Labor Assembly held Its 
regular monthly meeting yesterday after¬ 
noon at Bock's Hall, with a full attendance 
of delegates. Several new delegate* were 
admitted and sworn in. The semi-annual 
election of officers resulted as follows: Breai- 
dent, J. S. Butcher, re-elected; Vice Presi¬ 
dent, J. 8 . Hirchtnan: Recording Secretary, 
Wm. M. Bohon: Corresponding Secretary, 

M. J. Burke; Financial Secretary, James 
Horan; Treasurer, J. W. P. Russell. 

The Committee on ReviMOu of Conttitu- 
tion and By-laws reported anuMidments. 
which were laid over till toe next regular 
meeting. 

M. J. Burke made a report of his visit to 
Frankfort, bearing the petitions of the Louis- 
viil • workingmen on the convict contract 
labor question. 

Under tho head of the cood and welfare of 
the order, the following resolutions were 
adopted: 

WmetucAA. Senator Haggard h »u Introduced 
into t ip Leginlauiro uq exempdon bill on of 
property nnd* r aitacliraeui, wmeh ihi* a **-mbly 
conceivis ;o ne for Uu? advancement auu nob are 
or the workingmen: and. 

\S Hi p.itw, The preaeut luiv enacted about 
thirty iil'o, ami while it giv’e* amph* pro- 
:e ll«»n to theiarruer. for winHie Ik? ietU e-.pectalli' 
It ik-eius to have hf-eii passe I, it a .f-rds but staot 
protection to thr mechanic anil • •’>.» ^r. 

JlrmJvcd. That the Trades ami Labor Assem¬ 
bly of boul-vblo nod vtchdti’ do^*s heart llv in¬ 
dorse the b.ll a- p e* rated oy Bdaofur iiagcmrd, 
nu ■ e.irnestljr calL upon tue Senators mi.i K- pre- 
» vmntlws from LoaUville and vicinity io Ut>© 
ibelr influence and vote ui support of the same 

•Some lengthy discussion was bad on the 
good and welfare uf tho order, and tue A*- 
sumbiy adjourned. 

The KrntueUy I.egUla:nre arid Hie (school for 
Rifud Uulor* d • hlldren. 

Too much prni-e can not be awarded to the 
General Assembly of Kentucky lot* the noble 
manner in which it« members liavo respond¬ 
ed to the wishes of the Trustees of the Ken¬ 
tucky Institution for ihe Blind for facilities 
and means for educating the colored blina 
children. A greater act of simple justice 
was never done than in thus providing for 
the education of the colored blind children. 
They were justl>' entitled to consideration; 
their needs nnd demands for education were 
pressing, and have boon somewhat importu¬ 
nate, yet they have been putkrat and modest 
iu pressing their wishes. Uuder the Consti- 
tutiun of the United Prates they were en¬ 
titled to demand admittance to the school 
for the w hite children, but a compliance 
would have brok-u up the school. The two 
rjv - mu'* oe kept separata in their ©duca- 
i t • .» pursuits. Tho plan proposed by tho 
trustees is that a jeparare school shall bo es¬ 
tablish J to be uuuer the supervision aud 
zuatiagonienu, run - .\nd regulations of the 
preB--ut 'Ii umovi* o* the Kenl;i iy Institution 
foi* the Education o/ in© Blind. Tho Legisla¬ 
ture appiopi tmed n:-nn* for the erection of 
& school building tor colored blind children, 
and it w iil b© erected at kohjo convenient 
proximity to the stated inttitutiou for the 
whit© children. Kentuck>* ha* shown that 
she hns a heart tur institution;, of this kind, 
and this will redound to her credit through¬ 
out tbo Union. A number of tho States 
have provided means for educating the 
colored blind children, but no ono of 
them has done it with the heartiness 
and fullnesa that characterises the conduct of 
this good and noble Commonwealth. No one 


of those who voted for the institution wil 
eveMmve cause to feel ashamed of his act. 

Tho Trustees of the Kentucky Institution 
for the Blind are deeply indebted to the Hon. 
Win. L. Jackson, Jr., of this cil> r , for the 
zealous effort* he made in engineering this 
measure through the House of Representa¬ 
tive*, where it piet only on© opposing vote. 
He did his whole duty nobly and persistently 
until it was crowned with success. And to 
the Hon. R. G. Hays, Benator from Louis¬ 
ville. the Trustees are indebted for the cour¬ 
teous and forcible manner in which he pre¬ 
sented the honest and just claims of the help¬ 
less colored blind children to the blessings of 
education. The Senate acted nobly. Upon 
the passage of tbo bill, there was not an op¬ 
posing vote. 

’To the earnest and vnlunble labors of the 
Hon. Judge Bullock much is due. Ho la¬ 
bored zealously, intelligently and incessantly 
until his labors were crowned with success. 

The Trustees ar© already actively engaged 
in preparation* for putting up the building. 

IHE ELKS. 


\ Large Crowd Prf-aent at the Second Srclal 
Entertainment. 

The lodge room of the Elks was crowded 
yesterdnv afternoon by a large and delight¬ 
ful audience attending the second social 
gathering of this flouriMiing order. There 
were refreshments aud tmuic and singing 
and recitations, mo-tly by professional peo- 
plo. Everything passed off very nicely, and 
all who were present left well pleased. A 
number of the member* were called upon 
by Chairman Al. Bourln?r and made appro¬ 
priate responses to his call for a speech. 

Prof. Mo-.treb.ick and hh orchestra were 
in attendance. Those w ho took part in the 
exercises w ere Mr. John Kaine, in a spe¬ 
cial*.}’: Mr. John Wolford, a recitation; 
xylophone solo by Mr. Robert*; Jake 
Schwartz, recitation; clariunet solo by 
Brother Kiley; viojra solo by Brother Echu- 
nrau: illusion by Mr. Bcott; cornet solo by 
Mr. Holbrook* This Lodge of Elks prom¬ 
ises to be tho crack louge of the order. A 
larger hall will doubtless be bad for future 
social sessions, as they promise to be t«;o 
most at Li active form of social entertain¬ 
ment, in the citr. 

auKPr.rsBs. 

The lodge was treated to a pleasant sur¬ 
prise but night at the regular meeting. 
About the middle of the session Col. George 
Nortbup arose nnd m a neat little speech pre- 
sente 1 the lodge with a beautiful set of jew¬ 
els. u gift from Col. R. 8 . Brown, of the O. 
and M. road. He had been deputized by 
Col. Brown to make the presentation, and 
did it in a very haud*ome manner. 
Tne set of jewels is an unusually 
fine one, for the use of the officers of the 
lodge, while in the discharge of their duties 
in connection with the order. Mr. Georg© 
Pearce, E. H . made a happy response iu be¬ 
half of the lodge, and assured the giver of 
the jewels that thev would always be worn 
by the officers of the lodge, with credit. As 
soon os (his presentation was over, Mr. 
Charles Johnston stepped forward, and call¬ 
ing Mr. AL Bourher to the center of the 
11 - or presented him with a beautiful Elk 
badge as u token of recognition for bis un¬ 
tiring work and many *ervices to the lodge, 
he having done more toward Its advance¬ 
ment than any oth-r person. Mr. Bourlier. 
although considerably surprised, responded 
as follows: 

I Kf/iKer»,-ly thank you. one aud all. brother 
Elks, for this beautiful badge. You will beltero 
n?«ila- it Is with uufcignrd pleaaur I accent 
ttds testimonial of your npprvchttlon of th»* lade 

vice* I h.ivi* rendered this Lodce, in toy hum 
bit* war. which. 1 assure jou. 1 havr always cok- 
sidorod a l .b <r of love. Acain thanking yon tor 
int* m imfestAtu.n of your kindacs>, 1 cau only 
say. command me at your * ill 

Mr. E. Klaul>?r then said that as presenta¬ 
tions were tue order, he had one to make, 
aud presented the lodge with a beautiful 
photograph of the floral decoration winch it 
ba i preaented to Miss Annie Pixloy. Tho 
jewels and the bad„'e will bo on exhibition 
litis week in KUuber’s show-window. The 
In-t-tramed article is a beautiful piece of 
workm&tisbfp. It consists of an elk’s head, 
set in a carved gold frame. Tho uiimal’* 
eye* arc rubies, and just beneath is the num¬ 
ber of tho lodgo **c iu diamonds. 


A HA HE OLD BOOK. 

A Onfenniol Grrnun Uible to (tie Pnine*. 
■luu oi >lm. I . K. Mobley, ol I'Iiim ( tiy. 

One of the roo-t diminutive specimens of 
Holy Writ in the world is in the possession 
of Mi's. Dr. Cyrus L. Mobley, who resides at 
No. 914 Twelttb street, in this city. It is a 
queer production of the printers' art, and is 
a highly-prized heir-loom in her fatnny. 

Tin* quaint little volume consists of 128 
pages, one by three-fourths of an inch in 
size. It is a condensation of the Old and New’ 
Testaments, printed in ordinary vized type 
and on braves of the usual till* kuess. Be¬ 
sides the (ext it contains H**veral w,.od cut*, 
printed on a double 1 -uf of a smaller size 
than tin other pages. The binding is of the 
sort of puMeboaru used for the cii*ap*r edi¬ 
tion* of school-books, and b-.-ginmng to break 
in several places. 

It is a oueer book, both in contents and 
^et up. The title png© attests that it was 
printed at Halle, Germany, by J. H. iTssse, 
in 1776, und it.* great age is shown in tbo 
peculiar style of the printing. It i* in Ger¬ 
man, the text being exactly like that iu use 
to-day, and shewing thai the fashion of the 
let ter mg has not altered as that of the Eng¬ 
lish nas. Fancy burners are used ou each 
page, the printed matter not taking up more 
Lbun half the space. One and frequently 
two catch words are u-ed in every page, and 
the£* are sometimus divid ?d into syllable*. 
The spacing Is Very irregular, and the forms 
are noi punted parallel with the edges of tho 
png s. 

i ll© queerest of all, however, are the il- 
iu&trations. They show the remarkable 
progress that has been made in the wood 
engraver’s amt designer’s art. Each is a 
study m il*elf, but probanly the most re¬ 
markable is ono representing tho Old and 
New Testaments. It is on a double page, 
nnd represent* u city with a mountain in the 
background, and two men of gigantic Mature 
in front. Over the city is the word “Jeru¬ 
salem.'* Ou© * f the figure* has a staff tn one 
band nnd two tablns of stone in the other, 
being d'*ubll©ss intended to represent Moses. 
The other has u cruse of oil. aud the halo 
around the head iudicutea that it is Christ. 
The designing is very rude, and the per¬ 
spective faulty. There are some others 
watch ur<? in accordance with tho ancient 
interpretstiou of theology, and each are ex- 
phiiui.- i by n legend underneath. 

Thu tiny berk is in a good state of preser¬ 
vation, no: withstand lug its groat nge. Mr>. 
Moblev says it was £tven her by her motuer 
before she left Europe. How \ong it had 
been tu i.h>- family sue does not know, nor 
woollier the edition was common. It was 
exhibited once in the Extinction at imn 
Francisco, aud would havu been sent to tho 
Centennial had it* diunnuti'.o sizo not nrado 
it* los* probable. 

I.ow Bodb-trn. 

[CorreMO&ndmiictCleveland Leader.) 

Tho revival ol tho low bodice, and particu¬ 
larly the exclusion of sleeves from dressy 
toilets, have been marie the mo*t of by tho 
pus-sesEicrs of beautiful necks and arms, and 
if tho exhibition was confined to these wo 
might thank them for their generosity and 
let. the matter go; but unfortunately there 
are person* who do not seem to understand 
either what they owe to themsoive* ortho 
public, and w ho make a display wbtcb, if it 
was obligatory, would entitle thtiu to ihe 
deepest sympathy. It is only fuir to say, 
however, that t.’iere are fashionable women, 
loader* iu tue most brilliant circles, wh » have 
revolted from ttn« first against Uu* return to 
on obnoxious custom, and have not yielded 
to it an iota. Few out of tha grip’of tbu 
inin.-r circle of what is known as society can 
icali^w the amount of strength and courngo 
it takes to hold out against accepted law, 
«-vcn m thu cut of a bodice. Th* square n ?ck, 
the outstanding Medici or Mary Stuart col¬ 
lar, have been ill© alternation* for dressy 
toilets with those who could not countvamu a 
the low bo lice, and the use of gold nnd 
beadea embroidery upon lace has afforded 
ample opportunity for rich neck decoration. 

He Catrhira at it hiraw. 

[/{on at an Host, t 

The greatest surprise about the whole mat¬ 
ter i« that such a shrewd politician as Mr. 
Shet man should have been caught under the 
falling greatness of Billy Mahon©. But it is 
enough to consider that Uld Virginia has re- 
deemod herself. Tile glory of *uch a re¬ 
demption surely can uo l>© taruisUe-J by this 
straw tiiat the RcpubilcMn party, through 
John Sherman, is catching at to keep from 
g dng Uotvu in the coming political surge. It 
in an evidence of weakness that wisdom 
should have taught to conceal. 


LIVE STOCK AND TURF. 


Splinters from Hoof and Horn At Homo and Abroad 
—Full Notes of the Situation la 
Kentucky. 


A WEEK’S RECORD. 


EQUINE. 

Indianapolis has formed a trotting asso¬ 
ciation. 

Johnson, tho famous pacer, weighs 900 
pound*. 

The filly Mis* Harper is dead. She was 
foaled in 1R80, luiy bv Harper; dam Scythia, by 
Imported Scythian. 

L. L. Dorsey, founder of tho Golddust 
family of Tmtte*-*, has a son of the dead Audi or 
worth talking About. 

W. Henry, Now York city, has purchased 
tbo mare Tag. foaled in 1870, chestnut, by Gov. 
hUiimtun; dam Maggie May. 

M. M. Allen, Oakland, California, has 

C uruhnsed tbe bnrsC Patsy Duffy, six years old, 
ay. by Leinster; datti Ada A., by Asteroid. 

The ages of tho throe fastest pacers are: 
Johnson, 7; Little Brown Jug. 8 : Sleepy Tom, 
lfi Trotters: Maud S, 10; Jay-Evo-See, 6 ; St. 
Julian, la. 

An Alabama man, Clarence Crenshaw, baa 
purcho-Hcd the mare Bell© of Sumner, foaled In 
JK7H, chestnut, by Watnon: dam Coup de Clair, 
by Lightning. 

Robert Bonner is of the opinion that 
Little Brown Jug will bo in proper condition to 
train this spring. If so ho wifi be sent to bplan 
at (.'iucinnuti. 

Col. 8 . D. Bp.uce, New York city, has 
purchased the mure Addle Hart, foaled in 1*74, 
chestnut, by Asteroid; dam Miss Morgan, by 
Emancipation. 

J. D. Spkkrs, Poor a. 111., has purchased 
the stallion Longfellow S\ hip. seven year* 

old. “by a hors-* railed Kentucky Whip: dam's 
breeding uot traced " 

This year's Glenview and Indian Hill sale 
of trotters will lake place on April 30. It should 
br quite nn event, for the offering will certainly 
include younghtera of vary uuunual promise. 

George A. Wilber, Syracuse, N. Y.,ha* 
pureha«!*d the mare Jennie Brown, 0 years old. 
brown, by Exposition, son of Scnrca Chief; 
dam by Cayuga Star, son of Ryudyg's Harablo- 
Ionian. 

J. C. McFerran, Glenview farm, near 
Louisville. Ky., had an Important addition to 
hi* floe trotting stud la*t week—a hAnd*niuc Ally, 
by Nutwood; dam Moss Hose, by Woodford 
Marobiluo. 

O. D. Edwards, East Pawpaw, Ill., has 
purchased from 8 . A. Browne. Kalamazoo, 
Mich., the Bullion Sir Knight, foaled in 1831, 
bay. by Grand Sentinel; dam ■•Shadow;” 2d dam 
by Joe Hooker. 

Noah Armstrong, Glendale, Montana, 
has purchased from Dr L. Herr. Lexington, 
Kv.. the colt Thom Boy. foaled in 18S2, bay. by 
Maiuhrlno Fatchen; dam Lady Ayres, by Red- 
mon'.i Abdallah. 

E. H. Lerblance, Oklahoma, Indian Ter¬ 
ritory. ha* purchased from Peter Fox. Louisville, 
the horse Bavn-tt. fur.lei tn 1H79. chestnut, by 
Pat Malloy; da in Canary Bird. Harry Bassett’s 
dam. by Albion. 

Col. R. G. Stoner, ITambletonian Stock 
Fnrm, Paris, Ky., has sold to S A. Browne. Kal- 
anirtcoo. Mich., the coll fouled In 1883. bay, by 
Strathmore; <1 .tn by Woodford Mambrino; 2 d 
dam by Alexander’s Abdallub 
Thk mere Lady Bates is dead. She was 
bay. by Ashland, son of Mambrino Chief; dam 
by Cotikiin’s 8 tar. .She died the property of Da¬ 
vid Snow, Boston. Mas* , ichuscts Her foal, a 
recuut arrival, a wuperior bay colt r*y Daniel Lam¬ 
bert, is said to begetting along very well on cow's 
milk. 

From Hur-ttbouroe farm, property of 
Capt. J. L. Harris. Hovv^aburg, Ky.. some Knpo- 
rtor mares are booked for the wtallion* at Belle 
Meade. Oeu. Harding's farm, near Nashville, 
Tean Thus wa find Mayonsise. by Monarchist, 
on Great Tom’s 11-4. In like mauner for Great 
Tom i* Rapine, by Warpath; dam Gold Mine, by 
Imported Australian. Kinney, by Dudley. Is to 
be given to Bramble. 

Amos Zjgler, Shock’s Mill*. Pennsylva¬ 
nia, has made purcba-es as follows: 1 . Colt 
foaled in 1083, by Sorrento, by Woodford Mam¬ 
brino; dam Lady Moore, by the Rosekran* hor«e. 
2 Filly, foaleu in 1883, by Sonuro: dam Win- 
**ome, by Me^enjer Duroc. 3. foaled in 

1883, by Bonn Fide: ram “TibKddv. * 4. Filly, 
foaled in 1 ms 3. by Wentworth, son ->t Wedgewood; 
dum bonule Dumleo, by Ashland PatCben. 

Just as on© begins to boar of good ones by 
Auditor the new* reaches us that he Is dead. Al¬ 
most a year ago J. C. McFerran & Co. and R- 8 . 
Yeeeh made a sale of trotting brrd fu rs© stock 
on the grounds of the Louisville Fair Associa¬ 
tion. Auditor was in that sale, and he was pur- 
chased by S. . Trapp, Culhhert. Ga., who*© 
property be died. It was generally thought at 
the lime .«r the h.m|»> that Mr. Trapp g t a bar¬ 
gain Under Mr. Trepo’s management Auditor 
wav what may be termed a popular horse In the 
parlor the country pi which he wis hjcated. 
Auditor, foaled in 1881, bay. by KysUyk’s Haui- 
blcionian: dam by imporifd TfUMev. 

Lir. A. H. Williams, Owensboro, Ky., 
was in Louisville U.st week. He showed u* at 
Goose’s stable, in this city, two vnlunble stal¬ 
lions, a trotter and a runner, which he was 
taking with him for service In nis part of the 
country. The trotting stallion he obtained the 
use of for an indefinite period—the ultimate pur¬ 
pose. If all goes well, being to purchase—from 
Gen. Win. T. Withers. Kairlatrn farm, Lexing¬ 
ton. Kv Dr. W dham» ha* authority m-»-f the 
thoroughbred atalihra but for n vason. 'I he 
thoroughbred belong* to Maj. J. M. VVomack. 
Both Iioiaus are handsome bay©, well bred and 
of good h z-*. Joe Johnson is the name ol tho 
thoroughbred: ho is a well known horse, a son 
of Hunter’s i ex:ngton darn Betsev Hunter, by 
Oliver. The tro:t»ir Is an Alromit, tail and all a 
good deal like ht* *ire. His mime is Al- 
rii* nt Burton; darn Jessie Pepper, by Mambrino 
Chi-f. 

Maj. H. C. McDowell, Ashland. Lexing¬ 
ton. Ky.. in a communication addressed to the 
editor 0 > the Turf. Field and Farm, und cr date 
of February 2a. s iys that “the tdxtieth marc was 
engaged f *r Dictator to day. This closes his 
book for 1884. Many of the engagements are 
made by owners without naming the mares, but 
of those named ail are remarkable In point of 
breeding, or jierforrnances, or both, aud many 
nre noted. 3!or© of the daughters of Clark 
Chief are represented than of y other stall! ra. 
nnd included among them is Croxie, 2:10. Geo. 
Wflkrs furnishes six v^ry highly tired marcs, one 
of them being out qf the dim oi Pballoa. Among 
the Harold* nr r two. bred Just as Maud S. K out 
ot Pilot, Jr., mares, aud they out of thorough¬ 
breds. aud one also out of the dam of Phall.is. 
Pilot, Jr., fundflbrs but ouc. oh© bring out of a 
thorougbbr d. bui six arc cng.tgfd out of Pilot, 
Jr . mares, including one out of t< e dam of 
Maud is., and another otit or the dnm of Jay- 
Eye-See. and Naiad QuCrn out ot lackey 
Some of tho*© here named or ro- 

fnr*-d to arr producers them selves; but 
aiiimig the producer)* n»»t otherwise describtHl are 
old Nell, the most dlstJuguitihed of ah brood 
nwr»* 8 , being tiiednm of Clrmmi© G. and tore© 
other* in the ll*t. Aim v >la rr, the darn of Al- 
c.iniarn and Alcyone, and chedam of Endymlou. 
In the U-t I* a full *1»ter to Jrr»me Lddy. a full 
M*terio l atchtir. a *:ster it* blood ro Trinket and 
a haif-nlster to Mohawk Chief, and among tit© 
pTiormeni aw urox:e iu ”:H>, Nhia I Uueen 
•J:Jt>) 4 . and Cora Belmonta* jAiied. and 
al o i ©lie UroAfield Police i»az--tte 2: fi. 

Lucre.©Carrie *JrJ4f 4 . Magenta *J: 2 *U, 
L-rpe<s© and proiMbJy Olerami© O. 2:17, 

will fill one or .ir. Gordon*© engagement. Tm*o 
fa-^T mares ire now lien- from Pennaylvauia to be 
bred III 1M4, 18>5 ftml I 8 ^d. .:nd on-* from Ten* 
netisi-e io be bred 1H84 and JMv5. Dictator is in 
fine condition, and although iH year* old ho lias 
none of the indications oi nge, but would readily 
pAa* for a bors.‘ eight or nine. The book* of both 
King Reno and Triton are filling satisfactorily 
audit U probable that each will make a full 
aeoson.” 

“The stallion Blue Bull was." savs the 
Tw/, Field and Farm , ”n«ver pointed but 
twice, and the picture which was brought East 
does uot do the ltor«o justice. It makes the 
founder of tlu* great light-horne-v* faintly of In¬ 
diana look like a pony. The other picture hang 3 
in Mr. J. R. Wilson’s bouse, and it ls*nlJ to be a 
true likeness. It has never been c«>pi d, but v\© 
are promised a photograph of it. Blue Bull was 
very wide betv eon the eyes, but his cars were 
©mall, bis muzzle fine and his neck tapering. 
Ills coat was silken, bis leg* da: and »lnewy, and 
his whole appearance was suggestive of a 
thoroughbred origiu. Although he could 
pace fast, he did not have tiie 
drooping hip. The father of Mr. R. J. 
Wilson firvtsaw Blue Bull m the Shelby vfll© fair, 
and lie liked the horse *o well, although he was 
thin and weak, that he paid Dan Donll. of Law- 
rtrac-b rg. SI.0(H) for bun after seeing him pace 
« mile in J:3U-*. !>••»i»ll stated at the time that 

the nor^e came from Kentucky, and he called 
him Young Lexington. Under the latter name 
Plu -Bull made his first s'-nsou in the stud on Mr, 
James Wilson's man ut itutshviile. The sug¬ 
gestion that his sire wo* lTudtra s Lluo hull was 
uitt le by Col R S. Strader, and then the 
‘CalUon was chrisreded Blue Bull. Thi*. 
Mr. Wilson thinks, waa unfortunate. It 
was equivalent to stamping the horse with 
the reputatiou of being soft hearted. Ho wa* 
allowed to go to all sorts of marej. and naturally 
got some hordes v. Inch did not relUh split-head 
races. His get out of mares of quality hud 
plenty of stnminn. but usually, it is c Aimed, 
they were not handled with good judgment. 
They came to Uieir speed so rapidly that they 
were rushed into severe races, where the pooe. 
with toe-weight*, made them leg weary. Had 


thev l»o<?n allowed to develop more slowly no 
signs of weakness would have been manifestt-d 
In circuit campaign*. • >ld Nell, the dam of Sher¬ 
idan. was a gray mare, a fast rncker, nnd she 
was uwsi under naddir bv Mr WBeau's sister. 
After this mnrw bad been bred to Blue Bull she 
kicked the stallion on the knee, and made him a 
cripple for the rest of Ills lire. Still he sub e- 
quentiy paced a haif mile under saddle In 1;05, 
and covered the same distance in harness in 1:07. 
He died July 11 , IS 8 U, of a chucoioub uff' ction, 
and he left behaid him a grent light-lutrne** 
family. Mr. Wilson predicts that fifty of his 
sons nnd dang liters will enter Hie 3:30 iUt tieforo 
tho world is five years old* r. He U of the opin¬ 
ion that Fist©Good was the best <’umpaigncr That 
ever canio from bis loins. She would have 
beaten her record Rcveral second* had not too 
much n*e been made of her when young. Her 
danl was by Alexander's Abdallah. 

miscellaneous. 

It is stated that in 1883 as many os 461,- 
457 head of cattle wore attacked by foot nnd 
mouth diseasn in Great Britain. 

W. H. Corning, Ciovolaud, O., has pur¬ 
chased In Kentucky Jerseys as follows: 1. 
Alphea of Nentham 20000. 2. Judith Coleman 
11301. 3, Tustlna. 4 Juliet of Travilla. 5. 

Maid of Traviila. 0. Morgaram of Travilla. 

In the course of last week two additions 
wore made to the Jersey importation of Herr, 
Harris A McFerran. St. Matthews, Ky. Specula¬ 
tion, a 12 pound cow, gave birth tn a beautiful 
better calf,and Beauty 4th contributed a superior 
bull calf. 

“Mark Field" is in Louisville. His work 
In connection with Wallace'» Monthly is very well 
known, and his mission in the*© parts at present 
is in the interest of the publication just named. 
He wants to see for him«elf the lamous »iud% of 
trotting horses in Jefferson county, and this done, 
he w It pass on to Tennessee 

A sup of the pen made it Alexander in¬ 
stead of Attain HarthilL The two brothers are 
well known in Louisville as associated In veteri¬ 
nary practice, and it is the former, not the latter, 
thm Is now in Canada lidding to his resources by 
siuily in the best schools there Some fourteen 
rears ago Alexander H&rlhiU graduated in 
Toronto. 

IT is said that “the Increasing demand forth© 
b^simutton Isdlrmingattention to the Hampshire 
Down sheep, a famous mutton brood of England. 
Tho*e sheep arc b#*tt mUpt-d to high, thin land, 
which can uot be plowed, and u h »sc herbage is 
more nutri ious than most that grows on land 
tnat has lx?»n heavily ernpirf?d. The Down sheep 
Art’ very prolific. Their drosses nir.kt? a lamb that 
ai tain* good size early and make* the very best 
of eating.’’ 

George L. Danforth, Hayfield Farm, 
near Louisville, bos don© well with his flock of 
choice imported Southdown ©beep. It will be 
remembered that Mr. Danforth purchased from 
Lesiie Combs. Lexington. Ky.. nnd that Mr. 
Combs, In turn, bought in Enghtud, selecting 
from the flocks of the Prince of W nles and Lord 
Walsingh rn. Such is ihr character of tho 
foundation of the Haytudd flock of Southdowns; 
and to this flock a* nuinv as twelve superior 
lambs have been added by birth the present sea¬ 
son. 

Evidently, if wbat i* said of our man be 
true, A. S. Barnard. Chicago, is a «raece»* as a 
dairyman. The ©tatoment U that he "keep* 
tblrty-lhe common native and grade cows, from 
which he. during 1883. sold milk in Chicago mar¬ 
ket amouniing to $2,8110 84. beside* supplying 
milk fora large family. This he regarJa a* a 
profitable ©bowing, especially a© he conduct* 
enough other farm operui'-oira to pay his ex¬ 
penses. leaving the dairy nearly clear gain Tiie 
amount per cow is very nearly $ 8 \ or an average 
of Si OU per week through the year. ’’ 

Norvin T. Harris, Hurstbourne farm, 
Howeshurgh, Jefferson county. Ky., is back from 
New Orleans, and this marks the shipment from 
the latter place to Hurstbourne of seven head of 
very superior imported Jerseys —o cows aud 2 
heifer© Three of the*© cow© are by Bobby, a 
bull famous on tbe Island of Jersey, one is by 
Cetewayoand one by Nero. On* of the heifers 
is by Froctor and one bv La Fontaine Lad AU 
these are recent purchases for the upbuilding of 
the Hurstbourne nerJ. 

Thk Boston American Cultivator say 9 that 
“the business of driving cattle from Texas north 
to the Territories is meeting yearly with greater 
and more increasing difficulties, owing to the 
large blocks of land being taken up, over which 
tbe drivers will not be allowed to drive the herds, 
thus completely blocking tha old trails Verv 
hnjKirtam cuange© will in a few years take place 
In the Western cattle trade. Larg* tracts of land, 
now U'Od without espouse for pasturing herds, 
ruuflt ereutnally come into market, and tho 
rancher* will be obliged to lease or buy laud, a 
system that will still further redftce tbe much 
over-stated profit* of cattle r«U©iug in kite West¬ 
ern Territories.'' 

I lioruuL-hbrrd nud Fnll-Rlond-il. 

I To the Editor of the Courier-Journal.] 

There seem* to b© some confusion In regard to 
the terms thoroughbred and full-blooded or blood¬ 
ed. Are they ahkw m meaning.' U they differ in 
meaning. I would like to know wherein. 

W*. A. C. 

Breckiniudgk, Texas, Feb. 2 o, 1884. 

A >*tcer —The term thoroughbred is by many 
regardrd a* a name, not in any respect a quali¬ 
fying word proper to the race horse only. The 
sigQS are to the effect that in tb© United States at 
least it will not be p ssible to nialuL.ln tuts posi¬ 
tion. More and more the word thoroughbred is 
being used descriptively. Even now good usage 
justifies us In stating that thoroughbred is syu- 
ouymous with pure bred or full-blooded. 


KEW ALRAAT. 


The Circuit Court will resume its session 
to-day. This Is the last week of the term. 

Kev. R. Eabley, of L’aaaelton. is in the 
city, the guest of bln brother, Dr. EL P. Easley. 

Lent services will be held on Wednesday 
and Friday sveuiug* at Holy Trinity Calholio 
church. 

Mrs. Lf.m. Tyree died on Saturdnr eveil¬ 
ing: ag^d 48 years. She was a most estimable 
woman, aud her death wftl bt» deeply regretted. 
Her funeral will take place to morrow nl icrooon 
at 2 o'clock. 

On Saturday night the police were called 
up<>n to disperse a crowd of minors who gathered 
kuoui a colored saloon down town. No arrests 
were made, but It isthe intention of the police to 
break up tbe habit of boys, whiio or black, loaf- 
ing j bout such pluce*. 

The Opera-house was again crowded 
ve*terday ou the occasion of the meeting of ihe 
Kiag»ley Mission Kuuday-school. A large num¬ 
ber of workingmen iu various trades wore pres¬ 
ent, and gave their experience In relation to the 
cause of religion. The Sunday-school meeting© 
on Sunday afternoons are doing much good. 

TnK Coroner will to-day investigate the 
cause of the death of the infant child of Rat Ik* 
Lewis. It has ueen reported to the police offi- 
cer* and the < oroner luat the child was poiKoTi¬ 
ed. Mr*. Lewis *ays she is perfectly innocent of 
nuy crime. And will attempt to show that the 
charge made against her was through spite, aud 
uuwortby of cnsJeuce. 


JE FEE MS O A VILLE. 


Chas. Kremfr, who disappeared from 
thiscity about one year ago. has returned home 
and is helping his wife keep saloon. Mr. Kra¬ 
mer. it will be remembered, took a large sum of 
money belonging to his wife w ith him when he 
left home During bis absence she continued in 
the bittiom and was getting along very* well 

The Relief Committee has, through tho 
aid of tbe Government, made au official report 
of tne recent flood, ai* far as its department Is 
concrrm-d, in tni* city. This city has a popula¬ 
tion of about I l,tkH). 8,000 of wuom wen- driven 
from their homes by tbe water. Out of this 
number. 2.40U v.«-r© In abfolui** need of uvd tr¬ 
ance. The Government will prouahly continue 
to issue provinluns. Tho money which was sent 
to this city by contributions uiJl be used to re- 
pair ihe damage to the property of widow* and 
orphans. Tne money uppi op. rated by tho Gov¬ 
ernment, however, will be used to provide food 
and fu«*l for those who arr »till iu need and are 
unable to procure employment. At the next dis¬ 
tribution, thirty days’ rations will probably be 
l&sued to each person. 

BUSINESS NOTICE. 

Testimony ok Wh. Chkismax. Chief of 
Firs Department. Jr.irrEJuoyvitnE, Iso —Dr. 
ll'tnte.’tmtitn —Dear Sir: 1 had dumb chillsand 
night AW»-ttts for four months. I used quinine 
and various other remedies without any benefit, 
1 took oue bittle of your Chill Cure, and atu now 
entirely relieved. It prov^-d to be tho only medi¬ 
cine that would do me any good. Respectfully, 
W M. Chrikman, Chief of Fire Department. Jef 
fersonvilie, li.J. _ 

tiie corn is. 


CorttT or Apticals.—FRANK roirr. March 8 . — 
Emmersou vs. Zimmerman. Hickman; affirmed. 
Kurkunp v». Commonwealth. Jefferson: af¬ 
firmed. Reyna- o *. d«viak*es va Pejiudo's ad- 
ministrauir. Louisville Chancery; affirmed. 
Trustees of Bellevue vs. liahn A i'rapp. Camp- 
bt-U; i*eversed Morris vs. Murray, Franklin; 
affirmed. Smith vs. Commonwealth, Clark; dn- 
misscd Orders—Johnson vs. Harrison; uioumi 
to diaralss overruled; caase stthmltted. Yanker 
vs. Sweeney: motion to disuuss overruled 
uwensboro 'Saving* Bank vs. .Mattingly; trans¬ 
ferred to the Superior Court. Hand vs. Fricsch, 
Burkhardt o, o.; appeal granted below ills 
missed; motion to dismiss present appeal over¬ 
ruled. Wheeler Baker; motion to transfer 
overruled Cieaveland vs. Ferroll; dismissed 
agreed; guardian ad 11 tern allowed for M?r- 
vices. Boritour v© Grav«-t»; petition overruled; 
guardian ad litem allowed $ 10 . Johnson is. 
Common wealth: passed thirty days. Buckner 
^ Terrell vb. 8 amucls: Jones w Gibson; ittn- 
n 11 tied. Nortbcutt t© Curry; continued. Drake's 
administrator v*. Nemonm, &c.; argued by M. 
C. Givens and W. P. D. Buth for apprlleo.s and 
submitted T. B. Blakey was admitted toprac 
tice In thir court. 

Mr. Chas. F. Watson, 4iM5 W. Fayette 
street, Baltimore, Md., a driver for tho 
Adams Express Company, was verv barliv 
injured, his team having run awa’v. Mr. 
Wat-on says a few applicutiouA of 8 t JncoLm 
OU, the great paiu-cure, couipleuny restored 
hun. 


FINANCE AND COMMERCE. 

MONETARY. 

Faturoay Ev’exino, March 8 .—The Clearing- 
houK© exchanges, ineluding only credits, were as 
follows in the wer-ks ended as dated: 

H>rA© ended 1SSU. jm. . IS31 

March 1 C.u :»8 48 $4,0fid,028 $T,:.24.;I03 
March 1 .. 4.7DJ.41RI 00 4.8o7.0»Il 3,057,300 

The clearing* to duy amounted to $858,745 07, 
and tne currency balance was $173,008 33 . 

Tbe ftearing* have reached extraordinary fig¬ 
ure*. being 81.400.000 in excess of 1883. and 
atiout $ 2 , 000,000 In excess of 1882, in the cor* 
responding week. There are no special causes 
for this apparent, except the heavy Internal 
Revenue collections and largo speculative deal¬ 
ings in whisky. The Internal Revenue collec¬ 
tions footed up $325,087. of which $307,167 is 
from whisky, representing almost exclusively en¬ 
forced withdrawals. The general character of mer¬ 
cantile business ho© been uus atLsfnctory. The 
weather has been about as bad as possible, and 
the mud embargo in tno country has interfered 
with interior trade almost as seriously as the 
Ute floods. On tho whole it bos been a decidedly 
dull and barren week. 

The money market bn© been steady to firm, and 
on the whole the situation In the lost fortnight 
has been favorable to tenders. 'I he prospect* at 
present are in favor of firm rates. That the un¬ 
favorable vote to-day In Congreas on the Whisky 
Bond Bill was a very disagreeable and unpropl- 
tious event in respect to an important local inter- 
estis unquestionable. The fate of the bill Ik not 
settled, but if it fails, it will mean a firm money 
market. 

Commercial paper has been available at 7 per 
cent and call loon© on No. 1 collateral at 5<&6 
per cent. 

Eastern exchange has raised slightly, closing 
at 5t»c premium on ©ales of New York sight bills 
between banks. 

Ijocai stocks and bond© have been firm. Gas 
stock ha© guJued an important advance, though 
only one or two sales have been made. There is 
also a ©light advance in bridge stock, and Short- 
line bonds. Bank stocks and city bond© have 
ruled firm. 

The following table presents the prices of 
certain local securities at comparative dates: 

March 10, Mat'ch f, March 8, 

ikSJ. 183'.. IH3U. 

156 ....ift 150 ...-(&150 

J»J6 ... »(4,I75 ... (ft175 

147 ....<& 156 ....<*156 


Ky. National. 

First National — 

Bank of Ky _ 

Mer’s National .. 130 

Gas. 140 

LAN. Consols. lipq.* 
*L..C<ScL.lstmor. 116J4 
•L .,1 <£L. 2 d inor. nu s 
•J..M otl. Istuior. 114 
•J.. M.AI. 2tt inor. 1 iiUj 

Louisville 5a. 107 

Louisville 6 s 101 ^112 
• Louisville 7*. 11125 
Bridge bonds .. . UviV^ 
*W itU interest added. 


....*,4.143 
....<^ 1 X 8 

....iii.118 
...(’0,118 
.. tu.m 
...fend 
....<©118 

.«ftl07 .. <k 

102 k$U« 
112^124 
....< 0 »U >8 


....<^143 
....td .120 
....<^U8 
... iu.118 

...tain 

... (ftllH 
17 

... (a. 107 

102 & 1 I 2 

112^.124 

. .. .<tf.lU8 


The following quotations of local stocks and 
bonds are furnished by Messrs. John W. <£ D. S. 
Green, stock and bond brokers: 


STOCKS. 

Bid. 

Aaked. 

Kentucky National Bank . 

..140 

150 

National Bank. Flist . 

. 167 

175 

Nationui Bank. Hecoud. 

.115 


National Hank. Third. 

.. 120 

12o 

NuUouul Bank, Fourth. 

.119 

12054 

National Bank. City. 

-128 

128>§ 

Merchants’ National Bank. 

• • •• 

143 

Clti/eiiH' Natjou.d Bank. 

-125*4 


National Bank. German. 

..140 


Bank of Kentucky. 


156 

Bank of T©>utsviUe. 

76 


Masonic Bank. ... 

.: J 35 


Security Bank . 

. 160 


German Bank . 

..120 


Wesl rn 1 inancial Cor. 1 

Falls City BJuk. 

..111 

112 

io*»H 


Farmers 1 and Drovers' Bank.. 

. i07U 

ltis 

German Insurance Bank. 

..112 


Western Bank. 

.112 


Louisville Banking Company.. 

..228 

22854 

People’© Bank . . 

.122 

Gas Company stock. 

.118 

ISO 

I.ouUvillo Bridge Company... 
Louisville City iUilway .. .. 

- 130 

130*4 

.. 00 

Boutbcrn News Company_ 

. 

65 

CITY BONDS. 
Louisville 6 s of 1884. 

..ioov 4 * 


Louisville 6s of 1885. 

101 * 


Luurtvllb* 6 h of 1880.. 

. 1U3 

•104 

Louisville 6s of 1887. 

.104 

•103 

Louisville 6 a or 1888 . 

-104U* 


Louisville t s of 1K30 . 

..1U6*4 

•308 

Loui.-ville 6s uf 1892. 

.107* 



Louisville 6 s of 1893.107# 

Lou sviile 0s of 18!ifi.lUfilj* 

Lotus* file 6 s of 1 HU?.Ill 

Louisville tie of 1H«8.Ill 

Louisville 7s Of 1888.111V6 

Louisville 7a of 18i»l. 

Louisville 7s of .112*4* 

Louisville 7s of 1803.114* 


•100 

•iri« 

*11 ii© 
• 112 ^ 
•114 


40 

50 

,102 

•103 

101 

•1021 

.101 

•102 

. 20 

33 

. 20 

35 

.100 


• 10154 

98 

•102 

100 

•ioi 

. 22 

20 

. 81 


100* 


luo 


0014 

•166 

. 97 * 


99 V 4 

•106 


Loiitsvillt* 7sof 1804 .115W •HSU 

LiuisviUe 7a of lool.U0L* •122 

Louinvdle 7s ol 1003 .121*^ 

Louisville .'hi of 1020 ..lufl *107 

New Alo my city 0 ptu* cent. *107^ 

New Albany 7 |H*r cent.. 100 *111 

COUNTY BONDS. 

Allen county, old. 40 

Logan county bond* 0 per ccut.. 102 

Sh'-lbjr county 6 p*-r cent . 101 

Spencer county ti j>cr cent.101 

Taylor county 6 pur cent. 20 

Green county 6 per cent. 20 

Wuuhlngtou couuty . 100 

Marion county Uper cent.101^4 

Grayson county f per cent . 08 

Grayson couuty, new, 6 per cent. 100 
Muhlenberg county 7 per cent.. 

Lyon couuty 7 percent. 

Lyon county, new, 6 per cent... 100* 

Cal I well county 7 per cent.100 

Caldwtdl county b per cent. 00 ], 

McCracken county 7 per cent ... 07*' 

McCracken couuty, new, 6 per cl. 00*4 
railroad bonds. 

Loulsvillf* Transfer Co. 

Bioointield branch . 

Lou.. N. A. and C. 1st mortgage. U0 

SL L. Air-line, 1st uiort., 6 p.c. 

Cecellun branch .. 104 

L. A N. R K.. Greens’g br. 7 p.c. 100 
L. A X. K. K Co., consol. 7 p c. HTU 
L.. C. & L. R. U.. 1 st mort. 7 p c. 116U 117^4 

L , C. A L. K. It.. 2d mort.. 7 p.c, 1 10U *111 

J., M. &L R. K., 1 st mort.. 7 p.c 114-« *110 

J.. NL & L H. U . 2d mort-. 7 p.c. 110*4 
MISCELLANEOUS BOXDS. 

Canal bonds, 6 percent .103* .... 

Louisville Bridge Co.. 7 p c ... 10744 •108*4 

Water Co. bonds, 6 |>er cent.. ..112* .... 

•With interest added. 

Col. Lewis Bucknor reports as follows the In¬ 
ternal Revenue collections for seven days end¬ 
ing March 8 , 1884: 

Collections on list©. $132 82 

Collections on beer stamps. 2.247 75 

Collection© on spirit stamps.. 307,167 20 

Collectibns on cigar stamps. 1,272 75 

Collections on tobacco stamps. 15,050 58 

Collections on special-tax stamps .. 116 60 


•118M 

00 

03 

52 

•107 

•103 

118 


Total.... 


.$325,087 70 


Foreign exchange has ruled Arm, though oc¬ 
casionally fluctuating. Sterling bills are at tbe 
umr rates as a week ago. and are 5t4(ft6c per 
$1,000 higher than a year ogo. Gold exports 
have men* sod. and in the last fortnight 
amounted to about * 8 , 00 .>. 000 . 

In London, English consols have been about 
steady, and Amentum railroads have been dull 
and nearly stationary. 

Stiver bullion has declined slightly, being, how¬ 
ever. U^c per ounce higher than a year ago. 
There are indication© that vigorous efforts will 
be made to Induce Congress to suspend the coin¬ 
age of standard dollars. The result of suck 
efforts is very’ doubtful, but it can hardly be de¬ 
nied that the me v«-tnent will be more influential 
than any that bus been made since 1878. 

The following shows the rate* of sterling ex 
change in New York, the rat* of Interest of the 
Bank of England, the gold price of siivur, the 
price of British consols and of American 4 per 
cent, bonds iu Loudon, and of the price of mid¬ 
dling upland cotton ra Liverpool to-day, aT< com¬ 
part'd with last week and lost year: 

Mar. 10, ’S3. Mar, 1. Mar. 8, '8L. 

Exch’ge 481»4.d484 „ 487<&490 487&400 

Bkr&ie 3 3J4 AJ 4 

Sil’rbul. lio-l* 112)4 112 

Consols 1**210111-16 101 11-16 
V b- bds 122 *4 125 126 

Cotton... 5 7-ldd o$4d 5« ©d 

(Joveroment 4 and 4.Lj pt*r cent, bonds hare de¬ 
clined per cent., and other Issues are sta¬ 

tionary. 

The following table presents comparative prices 
of Government bonds: 


Currencies.. . 



Mar. 10, 

Mar. 1, 

Mar. 8. 


1S£J. 

WtL 


. 

. U2K 

fffiv* 

113*4 


. IHH 4 

12378 



.104 

101 

30) 


. 128 

120 

129 


The stock market has boon quiet to dull, and 
tlte tone of specula* loit has been tame. 

Tho following were the closing prices In the 
New York Stock Exchange to-day a* compared 
with lm*t week auu iasl year: 

Mar 1), Mur. 1, Mar. 8. 
J£iJ- ISfti. 

Western Union..74 { >4 

Missouri Pacific . 

New York Central.120 ll*>hi 116 

Eric . .' 25>$ 24?4 

Union Pacific. 0,*4, <0 8012 


Illinois Central .143-L 336*4 

Ha ck I -land .12:W« 12.J 321 

Su Paul .101 OOM 01W 

Michigan Central. 1*3Li 02 01W 

NY abash i’twific icommonj 20*4 16 15)4 


St. I, and San Fran.(com) 30 

L. and N.. . 55 

Nash, nud Chattanooga.. 5 m 
N orthern Pacific icorn)... iOU 

L.. N. A. and 0. 50 

Kansas and Texas . 3114 

H. and St. Joe (com!. 3!» 

Denver and Rio Grande.. 45V$ 

C.. B. and Q.11M 

Chesapeake and Ohio....121*4 

Canaria Southern. 68 U 

Texas Pacific. 40** 


33*4 

3S2 


The weekly statement of the New York Asso¬ 
ciated Banks is decidedly unfavorable, accepting 
large reserves a© the test, but In view of the 
heavy idle surplus held the changes this week 
are of no unpleasant significance. Reserve re¬ 
sources have been reduced $7,000,800. aud since 
March 1 about $10,000,000. The total is now 
$101,647,100. against $108,037,000 a week ago, 
and $64,330,700 a year ago. The banks bold 
therefore $32,210,400 more than a year ago, of 
which increase $20,000,060 is gold and $12,000,- 
006 legal tenders. The deposit liabilities have 
decreased, and the relative reserve Is $5.870.300 
less than last week. The surplus above the law 
ful maximum Is now $12,875,775. against a stir 
plus of $18,600,975 a week ago, and a deficit ol 
$•». 100.150 a year ago. Foreign exchange has 
ruled strongly against New York. F^stern ex 
change in W estern centers has been irregular, 
being about sustained at Chicago and Louisville, 
while St. Louis has declined to par. 

Tbe present position compares os follows with 
last week and last year: 

t *£* r <A in '83. March 1. ’*i. March 8. ’*4. 

Loans... $32o, 180,060 $344,438,600 $: 14S. 279.000 
Specie.. 51.510,700 76,848.200 71.043.200 

L. tend’s 17.017,000 31.789.700 29.003,900 

Deposits. 208,411,400 350.751,700 355,085,300 
Citeurn. 16.609,200 14.506,800 14.612.800 

74.602,850 89.937,025 88,771.325 

Re held. 69,436.700 108.037,000 101,647,100 

The SL Louis Republican says: 

1 Vr b f‘ nt i ulrjr for loan ' l> ver F sustained 
in the local mo.iey market, and yesterday's di»- 

foiuiighL Aside from the increased demand 
from city customers there l? a steady and con¬ 
tinued cal) from tho country banks and couutrr 
borrowers who have an established credit with 
th.bank. °f th.s cltr. Thl. demand inclixlea 
noth original offerings and rediscounts, but is in 
tin* main to assist the cattle Interests. ThecatUe- 
feedIng districts of Central Missouri have taken 
considt-rable money from the 8t. Louis bonks this 
year, but there has been a noticeable demand 
from other NUtes also, more particular^ from 
Texas, which s ill continues, discounts of 
Texa* paper of this class being among the 
transactions reported yesterday. This Is a kind 
of paper upon which borrowers habitually pay a 
very high rate of interest and those borrowers 
who are able to offer security of a kind justifying 
reasonable rates are unable to make loan© from 
their local banks at figures much under the rates 
Charged on less secure paper of the same class. 
InMesas the rat.*© range at 12&18 percent , 
while even in Kansas City ]2f£pl5 per cent, are 
the current rates. Much of tiie paper discounted 
by tue local banks at these rates has always 
ultimately male its way to tho 8 l Louis 
banks ror rediscount at the rerrular market 
rates for general business paper, the in¬ 
dorsement of the lock! bank giving the pa¬ 
per us only standing here. Last year, 
however, there wo© a departure from 
tiie old-time methods in this respect 
nnd considerable paper cam here for original 
discount. The applications accepted wore from 
both ranchmen and buyers, and, of course, only 
from such borrowers as were able to offer good 
collateral security, or otherwise to establish a 
satisfactory borrowing status. Loans were made 
to them as high as 10 per cent, in *ome case*, 
but n»*ver above that rate as far os hoard from, 
white much of the discounting last vear and this 
has been at.8 percent. This.it will be seen, la 
so much below the lowest rate obtainable at tho 
banks which have heretofore handled pretty 
much all this paper, that it is expected the vol¬ 
ume of business done in St. Louis will constantly 
inere»>*. as there Is no other market available 
for these borrowers which is able to give as low a 
rate." 

STOCKS AND ROADS. 


New York block Exchange. 

Nrw York. March 8 —Money is easy at IWfci 
f*cenL, closing offered at 1*4 $1 cent. Prims 
mercantile paper 4i*fc5>4 cent. 

Sterling exchange is steady; sixty-day bank 
era’ bills 487 and demand 490. 

Bar silver $ 1 12. 

Government bonds were steady. 

Railway bonds were quiet. 

In Slate securities Tennessee new to mixed rose 
to 41*. 

The ©took market was dull again. The result 
of the day’s trailing was to leave stock© very \W. 
tie changed from last night's pricea Of thirty 
of the most active stocks seventeen were a frac¬ 
tion lower, eleven a fraction higher, and two un¬ 
changed. Tho rruirkct closed quiet. Tbe net 
changes in the prices of stocks to-night as com¬ 
pared with lust Saturday night wrere Insignifi¬ 
cant in all but a very few. Out of thirty of tbe 
most active stocks during the week fifteen are 
lower and fifteen higher than a week ago. The 
most important change© were, Chicago. Burling¬ 
ton and Quluoy 1^4 higher. Long Island 2*4 
higher, Texas and Pacific 1^4 higher, and Cleve¬ 
land. Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis 2V4 
higner. All tue other advances were less than 1 
^ cent. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western is 
l*hi. Wabash preferred 1 Hi Oregon Naviga¬ 
tion 5 -C cent, lower. New York Central and 
Hudson River to day declared the usual quarter¬ 
ly dividend of 2 V cent., payable April 19. The 
book© will be closed from April 15 to 31. With¬ 
drawals of double eagles from the Sub-treasury 
to-day $459,000. Sales of stock© for tho week 
1,578.607 shares. 

The ©teamsnips Serria and Baltic, for Europe 
to-day, took out $4,500,000 in gold coin and bars 
and $ 200,000 iu silver. 

Application wa- made to the Stock Exchange 
to list $1,062,000 St. Paul aud Omaha 6 ’p cent, 
consol©; on additional amount of Northern Pa¬ 
cific general m >rtgAge and land-grant bonds, 
bringing the aggregate up to $45,509,000, and 
$5,uu0,000 of New York, Lackawanna and 
Western guaranteed construction mortgage 
bond©, bearing 5 V cent, interest. 

The transactions at the Stock Exchange to-day 
aggregated 152.000 ©hares, and included 30,000 
Dtduwore. Lackawanna and Western; 6,000 
Erie; 11 ,000Lake Shore; 9,000 Northwestern; 0.- 
000 Reading; 18,000 Milwaukee and SL Paul, 
aud 28,000 Union Pacific. 

There was some activity In tbe mining market 
during the morning and prices were generally 
firm. The market relapsed into dulloess after 
noon. Iroo Silver ©old at$l 550ft l 50 ©alter sixty 
days, Oriental and Miller at 11c, Central Arizona 
at :i0c, Castle Creek and Eureka, fifty shares, at 
$3 25. There was a sale of Cooper Queen, the 
first in a long time, at $5. 

BASK STZTOTEXT. 

The weeklv statement of tho associated banks 
issued from the « 1 oaring-house to-day shows the 
following changes: 

Loans. lucrea«e. 

bpecie, decrease ... 

Legal-tenders, decrease. 

Deposit©, decrease.. 

( irculution. increase.. 

Reserve, decrease. 

iiauss now hold above the25 $ cent. 

legal requirement. . 12,821,676 

OOVXRNMEXT BOSDA 

Three a...,,,.101 

k our and a halls, coupon. ........ .113^ 

1 ours, coupon..... 

Pacmc sixes of 0o. 

STOCKS. 

Cen. Pac. firsts.. 113J4 Kansas & Texas. 2014 

Erie second© .... Lake Erie <fc Wn 16^4 

Leh. a: Wilks.... lOtiflJ Lnke Shore. 102^* 

Lu. cousois. 77 Lou. £ Nosh. 4S»4 

Missouri taxes... 105 L., N. A. £ C.... 20 

liau. A St. Jo. .. HO M. £ O, 1st praf. 10 

SL P. A S. C. 1 st. 1 120 Do. second pref.. 5 

Tenn sixes. 41?4 Mem. £ Char. ... 33 

Do. new. 4H 4 Mich. Central... 91* 

Tex. P. L g bds. 50 Min. £ St. Louis. 10)4 

lex. P. £ K 10 G. 72W Do. preferred.,., 33 

U. P. firsts. 115re Mo. Pacific. 0OH* 

U. P. ianu grant. lH»Hl Mobile £ Ohio... 9*4 

V. P. « kg I da.. 114L| Morris A Essex.. 1244* 

Virginia sixes... 40 Noah. £ Chat.... 63 

Da can. ex-oou. 40!4 N. J. Central ... 88 V* 

l*o. deferred. 7 Nor. £ VV. pref.. 30 

A darn© Express. 129 Northern Pacific. 21 
Allegheny Cen . 12 Do pieft-rred ... 40V4 

Alton £ T. H- - 41 Northwestern.... llTA* 

Do. preterred... 03 Do. pref erred... *140^1 
American Exp.. »6 N. Y. Central.... 116 
B. C. R. £N. -• 7u Ohio Central.... 10.*?4 

I'Attuda Pacific.. Al'T Ohio£ Mis©....., 22^4 

Can. Southern... 5 IV* Do. pref erred ... 00 

Central Pacific- 00 OnL £ Western. I 0 V 4 
Che*. £ Ohio ... 12V* Oregon Navigf'n 85 

Do first pret ... 24 Oregon A I runso 10 

Do. second pref. la Oregon imfirov.. 41 

Chic. £ Alton ... 13 • Pacific Mall. 5'>94 

Do. preferred ... 145 Panaiu*- .. 08 

C- li. A G . 123 ‘4 Peoria. D. ££.. 1*V* 

C . St. L. A N. o. M'* Pitteburgb. 138 

r-SLL.£P.com. 10 Pullman Pal. C©r IO 8 V 4 

Do. prwtei retl— 2 J H»adl*|f . 68V* 

C , S. £ (’lev 35 F W, V 

1 lev a Coldmb. 65 SL Ja £ S. F ... 1W 
Del A Hudson.. 10$ Do. preferred.... 42 Ji 
Del., luic £ W.. 128 Do. first pref ... 87V* 

Denver £ K. G- 18 Bt. Paul.— 9lV* 

Erie. _ 21T* 4>». praiciTed.. .. JIG 

Do f»referred. .. 68V* St. P-.jt. 4 M. — 0394 


..$3,841,000 
4,000,000 
2,095.800 
4.060,400 
106.000 
5.870,300 


Fort Wavn«. 13) Texa^ PHcfiflo .. 10ii 

Mon. £ St. Jo... 38V4 * nloti I'uciMc ... 8 1,7 

Do. iiicferred..- ♦8$‘ii U. 8. Express . a 
Harlem . -193 W.StL £P... li 

USStig®:: 1 ? 

1.. R. £ Western, Hit* Western thlott,. 7 


£ W'tatlrn. it 

tAshed. •ExTptTT, ^ r r» 

Boston Bond a rut 8ti»cH 5larhet. 

P.orroN. March 8, — The following are tas offi¬ 
cial elating quotations at the Slock Exchange 
this afternoon: 

Old Colony.2 7-16 K. C. £ C. B. 7s. 0 ...~ 


























































» 


THE COURIER-JOURNAL: LOUISVILLE, MONDAY. MARCH 10. 1884. 


Rutland pref. 

Do. common. 

'V is. C, common. 
Do. preferred .. 
F. A 1*. M. pref.. 
T.,C. A S.L.l&c Os 
T..D. A Uur.ltic’s 
B. Wat. Bower.. 
Boston Lanil .... 

A. & T. 1st 7 s— 
Do. land grant 7» 

B. . H. A E. 7s • 
Eastern R. H. os 

* No 


OW L. R. A Ft. 3. 7s. 11** 

1224* N. Y. £ N. E. 7s. H* 

124 A AT.fU... 40 

* . Boston A Al.•. ... 

38 Boston A Me. •. ... 

* . C . b. A Q . •. ... 

* . C. SAC 

138 U Eastern R. It. 

* . F. A Per© M. 

•.... LR.&F.S.. 

I K. Y. A N. E ... 

23‘64 O. A L. C. pier.. 

37*» Do. common. 


10 ">4 

U I 


MINING STOCKS. 


►nn Francisco. 

6ak FaAXCisco. March 8.—Th© following are 
tbeo.HclJloloiln; quotation* at iho Stock Ex¬ 
change this afternoon: 


AHa.. .. 

Belcher ... 

Belle Ule — 

Best A Belcner.. 

Bod in Consol — 

California.. 

ChoUar 

Fa itio Lonsol'd. 
Consolidated Va. Co 
Crown Point..... 

Da*’.. 

Eureka Consol’d. 
Gould A Curry.. 


114 Hale A Norcross. l-% 
1 Martin White... 40 
25 Mexican. . 


Mount Diablo. 


2)4 mmmmmu 

PV4 Navajo. 2)4 

20 Northern Belle. 

Ifc Ophir. 2)4 

40 Potoai. 1 

Savage.. 1 

Sierra Nevada... 3 

_ Union Consol’d.. 2 

3Hi Utah... . 1W 

Yellow Jacket... Chi 

Grand Pru©. 

Boston. 

Bootox, March 8 —The following aro th© oil- 
dal closing quotations at tue Boston Mining Ex* 
change this afternoon: 

AllouezMin. Co.. 110 
Calumet A Hecia *. 


Quincy.. 

. 7SH 

Khige. 

.... 18.! h 

Silver Islet. 

. ldil'tt 

Onceolu.. 

. 

Comrai.. 

• 

Hurou. 

13" 


Copper Falla— *. 

Franklin. •. 

Pewablc.•*.... 

•No sales. 

Hew York. 

New You*. March 8—The foil owing aro the of¬ 
ficial closing quotations at the New York Miuia# 
Exchange tins afternoon: 

Horn ©stake. 0 Quicksilver, pref 28 

South Pactdc.... •. 

Sutro .. 15 

•No aales. 1 Asked. 


Irou silver. 150 

Ontario.r2» 

Quicksilver. 5 


FINANCIAL. 


JOHN W.&D.S. GREEN. 

434 Main «L. bet. Fourth and Fifth, 

B UY nnd sell Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate 
paper and negotiate Loans. We aUoexe* 
cure ordurs in the New York and i hicago 
markets. rur.'i dtlsuiy 

COMMERCIAL. 


Movement ol Leading Articles. 
LoriBvtt.t.e Board orTiufltt, March 8, 1384.— 
The following was tho movement of leading 
articles by rail arid river during the post 24 hours, 
and corresponding time lust y**ar: 


Articles. 


Africult'l imp. | 

A^lCA green,j 

Air. beer and 1 
porter, bbls 

Bacon, lbs- 

Boots A shoes. 

cases. 

Corn, bu.. 

Cotton, bales.. 

Coffee, lb*. 

Flour, bbb.... 
Furniture, p«a. 
Hams. lb<«.... 
H’dware, i 
Iron, pig, ton*. 
Leather, bdls . 
Nnrts, 

OH. carbon, bbb 
Oats, bush. .. 
Potatoes, bbis. 

Rye, bu . 

Sugar, bbls .. 
Seed, grnvtand 
clover, bugs 
Starch, bis... 

Soap, bxs.. 

Tobacco, leaf, 

hhds. 

Tobacco. m’fd, 

lbs. 

Wheal, bu..... 

Wool, lbs. 

Whisky. bbK. 


tier'd 

I Ahrrid 

I ItrC'd 

I Stuo'd 


j 188 i. i 

| 18S8 

1 1 S8S. 

1,408 

2,409 

352 

936 

186 

130 

261 

271 

114i 

228 

160 

265 

132,870 

170,826 

243.52b 

100,458 

807 

532 

581 

020 

23.061 

2.052 

12,756 

2,000 

1.80J 

1,015 

1.269 

919 

53.747 

55.160 

47,530 

181.33d 

1.739 

505 

990 

1,466 

1,378 

1.925 

1.300 

1.657 

3,2Mo 

70,544 

4.UU0 

23.148 

9hi 

1.443 

1,079 

1.886 

240 

00 

240 

53 

60 

141 

101 

461 

873 

514 

156 

MO* 

711 

ttoi 

150 

1,002 

8.100 

5.260 


2,6.3) 


693 

‘ ’ 503 

1,018 

1,823 

811 

1,500 


490 

1701 

80 

578 

282 

453 

588 

1,300 

100 

ml 

:i95 

160 

390 

6631 

328 

653 

183 

208 

241 

422 

8,208 

40.888 

2.302 

28.873 

3.185 

. 

j 4,0*53 

2.380 

1,108 


1 7.100 


781 

1.121; 

383 

1.041 


to the growing belief fbat tiiere will be no change j 
in the tariff by Qongresa this session. There ha< | 
been a good movement iu overcoailngs ami 
worsteds. In ladies’ cloths the demand has 
been active, and some Urge orders for Jersey 
cloths have been taken: worsted lams aro tinn¬ 
er. and In some cases higher prices are being 
asked. In new castomeres there has been con 
sulerable inquiry, and a few orders bare been 
taken. Altogether enough has been developed 
during the week to show that with good weather 
business in ilua department wBJ greatly im¬ 
prove. 

The following table gives the sales of domestic 
and foreign wool io this market for ench week 
since January 1. and for the corresponding 
week or 1883: 

im. l$*3. 

Weekending No.of nnund*. Xo.ofpounds. 

January 3. 1.770,600 2.742,000 

January 10. 1.717.300 2,205.800 

January 17 . 1.075.4CO 2,000.000 

January 24. 1.700.700 2.782.100 

January 31. 2.: 130,800 2,SNV.b00 

February 7. 3,211.000 6.410.3 0 f 

February 14.a 382,800 4.244.41DO 

February 21. 1.830,100 2.34 1.200 

February 28. 2,&$0.fiOO 2.557.500 

March 0. 2,181.000 2,013.000 

Totals..22.317.000 20,577. 1 l0 

Decrease in 10 weeks—7.250.200 lbs. 

The total amount of sales of various grades and 
descriptions is os 1 allows: 

Grade. .Pouncf*. 

Ohio and Pennsylvania. 288.700 
Michigan. VYia^ousin, eto 80,200 
'! erntory 


box: Shhds Franklin countv kef. lucaand tia*h 
at 5 *0 50 18. 8. 10 75 arm 10 5 *: 11 hhds Favette 
county loaf, lugs and trash at $18 75. 18 75, 18. 
13 75, 12 5d. 14. 0 30, 14 73. 7 70. 17 and 11 73: 
18 Itlids Woodford count v leaf, lues aud ira*!i at 
$16. 14 23. 10. Ill 50. 11 !>0. 7 9u. H 73. 8 60. 8 80. 
0. 0 00. 7 80, 10. 0 4U, U 1)0 and 12 25 4 hhds 
Mercer county lugs and trash at $13 50, 10, 7 60 
and 5 SO; 4 hhds Owen county lues and trash at 
$13 25, 10. 9 pu and 14 50: 2 hhds ShHby county 
lugs and trash at $0 40 and 6 30: 5 hhds Cumber- 
land county leaf and lugs at $0 CO. 0 80.6 35, 
6 40 and 8 40: 1 hlid Meade county lugs at $0 3d: 
1 hhd Breckinr.dge county leaf at $000; 2 hhds 
Henre county leaf and trash at $15 15 and 0 50; 
1 hhd Logan county leaf at $7 3d; 1 box at $0 50. 


Texas aud Southern ... 
ComMng nod de.aiiie . 
Uo was bed aud unmer¬ 
chantable . 

Pulled wool and noils. .. 

Bco ired aud tub. 

i’nilforma spring. 

California full. 

Odds and ends.. 

U uclasalUed. 


277.100 
31.100 
28.700 

187.100 

257.500 
134.000 

414.500 14 <£>23 

23.000 12)*<<fc-i 

ID,000 - 

310.100 



# 2,053.000 

FOBB1G*. 

Grant. Pounds. 

Foreign carpet. 40.000 

Australian . U1.U00 

Total. im.ooo. 

Total domestic.2,053.UOO 


Price. 
P T. 

33tfft45e 


Chicago Provision ^taltstlev. 

The closing prices of to*day in Chicago com¬ 
pared as follows with the prices ruling at the 
ctare of last week aud tho currcspoudlug quota¬ 
tions of loan: 


f|l 


1 


VI 


iff 

§<l 


9 a . 




: ; ^; 


O 

: : n 


i! i 




: • f 


; a 

: : 5* 



*0 


*0 


e 


8 SK 


c 

8 


; SS 


• 53 

. 

V c 




g» 

0 

i g© 



55 




• *“ r - 

* 

j 55 

s 

^88 

is 


“ 

> 

: SS r 

: *m 

5 


w 


JS 

•JEL 

► 

Ur- 


*•« i 

V 

2 

5 


K 

> 

x5< 

h: 

jjjSis 


c- 

'§ 


r 

c 

853 


GQ& * 

e 

B 




S- 





.«» 


55m 

s 

88“ 




: tt 



f* 



v 


9xt 



h* 

8^8 


8 


rag 


Bj-1 
-J Co 




$ 


a 

fi'E* <p 



% 

y* 

a^i-a 




dc: 


5n7J 

~7. 

I£& 


; 


sjga 



$ 







£ 



The Quinine Market. 

lAVio York Commercial Bulletin, March 8. 1 
The exnggcfiied reports lately made of allied 
tab a of quinine at high prices have given pUco 
to general »tatementt of a more sober and relia¬ 
ble character. Powers A Weightman are deliv- 
•ring and taking new ordere at $l 40. Some 
other manufacturers quote more money while 
oUiers are down to P. A W, ’a price. German in 
bulk Is quoted down to $l 35 *pot and SI 25 for 
future delivery, with sellers more anxious than 
buyers. In fact, there Mem* to be more than 
enough quinine to go all around; rather too 
much for the originators of questionable report© 
recently put into print. AJorin me. however. 
Keeros to be iu strong position At all events, it 
is stated that P. A W. brand enn not be bad for 
immediate delivery, and that $U ( V4 25 1 h*s low 
as any American brand can be secured at. Cin¬ 
chona is found at something under the extreme 
price* quoted early in the week. Cutch is look¬ 
ing stronger ou Increased demand, and meets 
with better demand. Quicksilver remains strong 
at the recent advunce. An advance on mercu¬ 
rials is expected, but up to the time of writing 
non© bad oceu announced Aside from the above, 
we learn of no ehuuges in prices, or new feature 
of importance. 

The Wool Market. 

, [Boston Advertiser, March 8.) 

This week has been a quiet one. and yet each 
bouse has reported a fab buidnesn for the reason, 
which Is surely late. It Is, however, noticeable 
that the sales of domestic wool nave been larger 
than a week ago by Ibl.-iuo n>*. tn e preponder¬ 
ance of the sales last week ba ng caused by 
transactions in foreign carpet, which were 3P8.- 
000 Ihs more than this. So that it is fair to state 
that the week has been fully up to that of Im.t 
week. Among the soies is included some wool 
that Is believed to b« the surplus stock of a cor¬ 
poration whose business I* being curtailed. In© 
ton© of the market is healthy for desirable wool*, 
receipts of domestic wool* beinjr much 1 **a than 
a year ago, and aornc o/ the larger manufactur- 
era, it is very noticeable, nr© in the market at 
tb© close of tli« w*-et Some of them do not 
hesitate to report a slight Improvement 
in Roods, and that they trnve B om© fair 
orders, lb© lint of buyers printed below 
shows conclusively that there has been 
more looking rpuud. Some dealers, whose atocks 
are run down, have born in the market, but with 
all ibis there is no snap to trade, for nil sale* rep¬ 
resent ouly the more urgent needs of the pur¬ 
chaser, and the indisposition to buy much ahead 
continues. It U generally coacoded that there 
will be no change intb© tariff, but as the time 
approaches for the new clip# to be prominent in 
the situation, there is no disposition among deal¬ 
ers to advance price*; and, us manufacturers 
who ore posted know thi*, they govern their 
purchase* accordingly. All staple wool* are 
Oreo, and select tons are being narrowed down 
very perceptibly. The demand for sur»era has 
increased rather, and coarse wools ar© ©specially 
nrm. All medium wools are quiet. Coarse U 
blood unwashed i« cspirclally scarce and firm. 

The lura* arrival* of Australian wool* by the 
Steamer Oulf of Suer, it was hoped by gome 
would hav© a tendency to weaken values, and 
xiaimfacturars hav© in many instance* been of- 
©ring prices that hnv© not bceu accepted. There 
a no pressure to sell this Australian woe.), for it 
Is believed that it will all b© w anted. Only u few 
.otaof the better class of cress-breeds have been 

this, krade I* scarce. The eaie of 
$0,060 lbs Australian at 44^4 Tk\ that is reported 
Australia, It is Lnown 
tliat three largo mm* have been buying Au*rr*a- 
Uan wool at t 1 m London aalo. but their purebn v* 
have bem mostly Adelaide xvuol*. In all 2,500 
ha.©8 have been bought. It 1* claimed that wool 
would bu vq b.*m more advamageoualv bouglit 
bore, but. While that may b© ih© case no*v, any 
Ur*:© Inquiry mignt hare emused higher prices to 
nil ' The London nal« will olo©e about the 13th 
Instant 

In woolen goods there ha* bct‘u worn © Improve* 
merit i f.otUliig trade reports »onu? day* of 
active diKfribmion. and ogonfs als > n«port more 
11 stroog«r tone, due iu 

#*rt to the ftw ^dsya ot goed weather aud also 

l 


Total for the week..2.184.000 

C otton CouimUilons 

A New York exchange says: 

**A meeting of tin* members of tho Cotton 
Dxchauge will be held »hi* afternoon at 3:15 
o’clock to hear th« report of tiic* ). ommiitoe <>f 
Twruiy-on© on tlte present commission lawa It 
*%a* impw**ibi»? yesterday to obtain a copy of the 
report or th© cuiumttl©<*. but it was learned t.h,*t 
they roeomtneAU the iollon inc change-.- Under 
the present ruh*H, whan n hroser mnk> * a sale or 
purchase of 100 bnl»r«, and gives up during th© 
day the itiiniH of his principal, lie is Allowed to 
chbrgeSl; the committee recommend Us at this 
charge be reduced to ?5c The prasattl pat • for 
the tou. d turn.' as the purchase and *alc of luO 
bales is called, is $5 between member* residing 
m tin* city. Tho committee propose to reduce 
tin* rat© to $4 50. and make It upplicabh* to both 
resident ana notireddetit member*. Where non 
te-ulcru members ore concerned the present 
riilt-K dx $*i5 fur the round turn; tho commute© 
propose to allow to the member* of the Kxchango 
ilvmg in New York or Hrooklyu the privilege of 
making a rebate of $15, ami to mmntMTS else¬ 
where $12 SOon the nresunt rate*. Thero will 
be u very largo meeting this anernoon, and a 
rather lively dUcussiou iaamidpai«d. M 

THE MARKETS—WEEKLY REVIEW. 

The Leaf Tubucco Market. 

Th© sales reported by th© warehouses In th© 
week just closed and in the expired portion of 
the currant mouth aud year were .In hogsheads) 
as follows: 

Marthnuses. TFeek. Month. Tear. 

Green River . 47 S2 (I7U 

Ninth -struel . 288 368 2,b -8 

Fik© . 43 iw 738 

Gilbert. 52 02 8ii2 

Pickett. 158 204 1,3?*.4 

iVopio's. .. 64 Ml 080 

Boone). 120 179 1,073 

Enterprise. 07 no ou8 

Karmera’ . OtM) 356 2,113 

Kentucky Association.... 07 06 678 

Planter* 1 . . 83 113 862 

Falls City . 200 24 h 1,470 

Louitiviiitt . 230 287 l.OuO 

Totals, 1881 . 1.708 2.215 ioiiilJ 

Total*. 188.1 .2.372 3,080 10. dtO 

Totals, 1882 .1,935 3,186 10,216 

ToUlw. 1881 . 1.339 2.786 13.461 

The sales during the weak and year were sub¬ 
divided ns follows: H’eefc. Year. 

Crop of 1883 . 1,639 15.1P6 

Former osops . oii OO.i 

Totals .. .1.708 lOp lifi 

The receipts were 1,100 hhds , ngainit 2.370 
last week, and 1,100 In the corresponding week 
of last year. 

The rejections tvere 201 hhds. and the propor¬ 
tion to actual sali-s wm 11 p -rcenl. In Clocin- 
uati this week the proportion ot rejections to ac¬ 
tual sales was 32 per cent. 

The receipts have been very* light, aggregat¬ 
ing less than half the amount received 
last week. This sharp failing off ts 

due mainly to the impassablo condition 
of wagon roads and a small movement will 
necessarily continue until drying weathor. 

The offerings of Burley tobacco have consisted 
largely of common and medium grade*, which 
hare met a brisk demand at full prices. The 
better grades have been in moderate supply and 
rather quiet in tone, but prices have been sup¬ 
ported. Lugs have coutinued strong. 

In dark and heavy styles. Inga have continued 
in the lead and have been pushed up to a prox¬ 
imity with leaf rarely if ever before witnessed. 
The contingencies of the Spanish contract hav© 
been the objective point, but th© supply has 
been light, as it will probably continue to be. 
Offerings of dark and heavy leaf have been taken 
at very full prices, but thero are no quotauio 
changes. 

We quote full weight packages of new crop to¬ 
bacco as follows; 

Dark and Heavy. Jfv rleu. 

Trash . . . $0 oiiffb 0 25 $0 0ug> 8 00 

Common lugs . « 25 0 50 7 OUw, l) 00 

Medium lugs . 0 75<fh 7 25 8 0U<al0 00 

Good lug* . 7 5(JQ* 8 00 10 OOiu.1-1 00 

Common leaf . 7 0u<& 8 oo io oo ,i 14 00 

Medium leaf . 8 25 f o 8 50 14 uo&ltl 00 

Good leaf . 0 00&10 50 17 O0&2O 00 

Fine and fancy leaf.. 10 Output 00 22 00(0*25 00 
Mr. T. B. Puryenr w rites us follows from Padu¬ 
cah. under date of March 8: 

••Receipts, 302 hhds: offerings. 210 hhds; rejec- 
tion», 10. Uornmou to good lugs ar© quoted at 
OJqtffcO-XiO nud t4>4si7^c, common to modi urn l©af 
at 7*4 <-Vj dtqc and and good lc.it at 0)4 $ 

11c. After a «Uhpeti*Jou of two week* on account 
of high water, sale* were partially resumed 
tills week. The quality was generally poor. 
Prices were M&ViP higher, and the market at 
tinu-> was excited. The weather is cold and very 
weC* * 

Satubdat, March 8.—The sales to-day were 
distributed as follows: 

Th© Boohs Horra sold 11 hhds: 0 hhds Da views 
couuty leaf and lugw at $9 50. 9 90. H no, 8, 7 and 
:**ee leaf and lugs at $8 an t 7 
3 hhds Logan couuty lug* at87 75, 7 80 uud 6 45. 

Tho Picbett Horn* aoltl 25 hhds: 3 hhds 
Washington county riml ) Burley leaf and lugs at 
819, 17 25 aud 14 75: 5 hud* Trimble county 
common leaf and trash at $12 50, 12 25, 12, 8 70 
and 7 50: 1 hhd Hancock county common leaf at 
$7 60; 5 hhds Brec rimldge county common leuf 
and lug* at $H 60. 7 90, 7 MO, d 40 and 6 33; 3 
lihiis iuiwrenc© county rind.) leaf and lugs at 
$8 70, ti 50 aud <3; 8 hhds at privaie sale. 

The Falls City House sold 17 hhds: 2 hhds 
.Shelby county common leaf and trash at $13 25 
ttiul 0; 2 hhds Breckinridge county lug* and irash 
nt^OtiOaud 0 25: 3 hnd* Brcc*tnridge county 
leaf and lugs at $0 00, 7 00 and 6 45: 3Titidn com- 
uion leaf at $10 .8). 7 40 and 7 3u; 4 iitnU Jlenrv 
county leaf and lugs at $17 25, 14, 10 25 and b 10; 
3 niids Hart county leal aud lugs at $11, U and 
0 30. 

The LotrtsvtuLE Hoimic wold 11 hhds: 5 hhds 
Woodford couuty leaf at $11, 14 75. 16 73, 10 75 
aud 17 25. 4 hlids Mont- nm-ry county leaf and 
lugs at $9 3 j. io. 12 and 12 75; 2 hhds Trimble 
county i©af and lugs at $9 70 and 17: 1 hhd Todd 
county lugs at. $6 i nud Adair county lugs at 
36 50. 

Th© Gree.v-iuvxr House sold 14 hhds: 2 hhds 
Cumberland county leaf at $10 2ft and 8 90; 10 
dihds Taylor county lcar and lug* at $8. 7 80, 
7 40. 7 30. 7, 6 90. 0 80, 6 70, 0 OU and 6: 2 hhds 
Green county leaf and lugs at $8 90 uud 6 60. 

The Prxo Bouse sold 7 hhds: 1 hhd Weaklev 
county (Term, i leaf at $9: 1 hhd Sumner county 
tTenu.) leaf at $0 30; 4 hhds Shelby county |©af 
aud lugs ut $15. 0 10, 8 70 and 0 40; 1 hhd Old¬ 
ham county leaf at $16 50. 

Tho Pkoplk's Housx sold 5 hhds: 1 hhd 
Todd county common leaf at $7; 1 hhd factory 
trash at $3 75; 2 bhds Simpsou county leaf at 
$9 70 and 8 80; 1 hhd Logau couuty leaf at $10. 

The Platters* House euld 20 hhds: 6 hhds 
Owen couuty leaf. lug» and trash at $22. 14 . 8, 
7 50 and 7 30 ; 0 hUd* Henry couuty common 
leaf, lugs and trash at $15. 13 75. 0. 8 30. 7 40 
and rt 26; 0 hhds Breckinridge county common 
leaf and lugs at $10 50. 8, 7 50, 7. 6 40 and 0 10; 
2 hurts Grayson county common leaf and lugs at 
$7 05 and 6 80. 

The ETTKapRiwg House sold 27 hhds: 9 hhds 
Henry county leaf, lu*s and trash at $14, 13 25. 
12, 12. 11 50. 10 75, 10 75. 0 30 and 5 00 ; 12 hhds 
Scott county lugs and frozen tra*h at $5 55. 5 30. 
6 10. 0 10, 0 10. 10 50, 0 10, 0. 6 80. 5 00, 0 30 
tin do I(); 6 htils T* unessue lug* at £0 45, 0 00. 
6 4o. 0 0u. 0 05 and 0 50. 

The Farmers’ House sold 37 hhds: 13 hhds 
Montgomery county leaf, lugs nnd trash at $20. 

,8 ‘ 10 ’-**• 1®. 13 £>. P. 7 80. 7 50. 
i An 0 90 and 6 20; 7 hbrlft Carroll county leaf 
and luga at $18 .*0. 17 50. 16 50, 16. 10 60. 11 and 
o c °ow»on leaf at $u 20. 

°* 1 tiM buvie** county leaf 

ttt 2 0 h . h A" county leaf at $10 25 

? T ?*. n county leaf and lugs at 
ii 0 o a » n K^’i! hha county kind.) 

IVWLri'iF hhdw Ha, t county leaf at $10 50 and 
10: 1 hhd Henry county trash at $5 40; 2 hhds 
old leal at $8 25 and 8 25. 

Tho Nurra-arnuurr House sold 53 hhds and X 


The Cotton Market. 

Controlling centers hav© been rather inclined 
to quietness, and the market ha© been leaning 
somewhat In buye a’ favor. Spot quotation*, 
have been about au-tained, except in one or two 
Southern markets, where a reduction of 1-I0c 
has occurred. Futures have declined bit 10 
points. 

The movement portward has continued light. 

with ©xports reLatiVrly liberal. 

Advic©s as to tne goods trad© have been favor¬ 
able a - to England, and rather dubious os to the 
United States. Ther© ha* been no speculative 
feeling, and consumptive demand has furnished 
about ail the business nassing. 

In our local market there have been small re¬ 
ceipts and offering*, w ith inquiries light, except 
at limit* beneath th© view* of seller*. Prices 
l\ave ruled steady. 

We quote middling upland at lO^^IO^c, low 
middling lOQHBgc, good ordinary 0 * 4 c, and 
ordinary at 8 ^c. 

The following were the closing prices of futures 
in New York at the eu<l of the last two w eeks and 
in the corresponding week of 1883: 

Mar. JO. '88. Mar. 1, 'M. Mar. 8 , 

March.Iu.i5c KUMc 10 . 81 c 

April.10.290 10.07c 1081.c 

May. 10.43c 11.44c 11.02c 

June. 10.57c 11.200 11.140 

July.Iu. ,uo 11.300 11.25c 

August .Jo. Me ll.45c 1135c 

September.10.51c 11 Ho 11.06c 


The Pro* 1*1®n MarhrL. 

There has been a very mild type of speculation 
in controlling markets, and th© fluctuations hav© 
been such n> are incident to mere brokerage op* 
erauonsauiong member* of the Exchanges. Tne 
drift m Chicago until y sterday wai rather favor¬ 
able to buyers, aud a moderate recovery has oc¬ 
curred latterly. Atthocl.ise prices were lower 
m that market than a wvek ago by 16 ks»20o per 
bbl in rnebsp jr*. 6c per 100 IM in riba and 
10<^20c per 100 ff/s In steatn lard. Hogs have 
ruled Hi iu. cloaing 10<$3.*)C higher. 

In our local market trade nos beeu light on 
consumptive orders, but there has beeu a fair 
amount of trading between dealers. 

We quote as fuliawa for car-lota, cash: 

MK88 PORK—Mesa pork $18 per bbl. 

BACON—We quote shoulders8c, cleur rib sides 
9$&&ioe, and clear sides per ir», loose. 

BULKAlEAl'8—B‘»ouldera,partly to fully cured, 
7c, clear r»b stdea, bjqc, aud clear ©lacs b)t<c. 
loose. 

LARD—W© quote choice leaf at llrftll^cper 0> 
In tierces: steam lard, Ot&Ofec. and prime family 

at 

8UGAR-CURED MEATS-lIams, VK&UHc; 
breuLkfast bacon, 11 ^11 Hr-*; shoulder© b^c, 
packed. 

BEEF—Dried, 16c tor Louisville and 15c for SL 
Loul.-> cured. _ 

Flour, Hay and Grain. 

FLOUR—Thera has been a very active trade on 
8outbem orders, atm demand forguol aud flv© 
grades lias b»*©u Hi excess of the supply. Local 
trade has been quiet. Prices nr© qm»ubly un- 
c(ntng«<l We quote ai $d 5u(i^o 7o tor choice 
patent. $6^6 25 fot plain patent. $.i 50^5 6.*tor 
No 1. aud low glades $4 euQ.4 50. Buckwheat, 
Western, $d 56. 

W HEAT—Local ami shipping demand hns ex¬ 
ceeded tne supply nnd puces have rule<! strong; 
$1 05 fur No. 2 red oo tiack, and $1 ud for No. 
2 longborry. 

CORN—Demand has been active, and price.* In 
aelierU favor. Now mixed Is salable on irack at 
51c, bbell’-dat 51c, No 2 mixed at 53.4c, and 
new No. 2 white at 534(2$54c. 

OATS—Demand good, and prices havo ruled 
Arm. No 2 mixed Northern Is ralablc on track 
at 37c. and white at ;L»4'i*4'Je lor No. 2. 

RYE—Friers are flun and higher No. 2,05c 
on track: No. 71. nominal. 

BARLEY—Dull aud nomiual. 

MALT, Ero.—Prices are st ea^W and unchanged 

w 

Medium distillers ouul.^.;.O5(^h70c 

Mash .. 5 .<&60o 

Rye malt.....7uc 

Coru malt...?Oc 

Hops. Now York and California.3uGfc35c 

CORN MEAL—Firm at last pricjit We quote 
bolted at $1 25 : F 106 lh*,the luiude price for u©w- 
orop meat, nun kilo-dried at $2 85 H bbl. 

MILL OFFAL—Firm and tending up. Bran 
on track at $16 and ship-'duff $17, middlings at 
$lu. Hran and ©hurt* mixed at $17. 

HAY—Demand baa been moderate, hut fully 
couui to Uie snpply, and prices hav© rulml firm. 
W© quote at So<ihli on arrival (or good to 
prim© timothy, and $7<&10 for common mixed. 
Baled oats SH(dil4 30 tor Urge bales. 

STRAW—We quote wheat at $7 on arrival. 


The Grocery Market. 

CANDLES—There aro no quotable changes. 15 
<&154i’ * or weight 4* to 8s per lb. 

COFFEE—There has been a quiet but steady 
tone, «od prices are qucfably unchanged W© 

? |uate Rio at 12 ^ 124 ^ for common, 134&14C 
or fair, Mr prime. 1444 ftluc for 

choice, and lo4ftlo9^o for fancy: Java at llift 
24 c; Lag any ra at 13ki*14c. and Mocha at 28ft30c. 

CHEESE—Skim aud pn«n»? factory c1u***m©* huv© 
baeu firm and tending up. W® quote at 114 ft 12 c 
for skim, and Uic (or prime factory, 1. ft L»H»c for 
crcaiu-cneduar. 

MOLASSES AND 8YRUP3-New Orleans mo- 
la*«esn*w. :Uft55c fur fair to prime; mu.; araouso 
syrup. 4Uft43c; aud corn syrup, 33ft35o; sor¬ 
ghum, 35ft7I7.c 

RICE—Carolina and T^ouisiaua, 0ft0}(c for new 
Louisiana, as io quality. 

SUGAR—The tone has been rather weak nnd 
prl<bsv© lowered, but latterly the tone is firm 
W® quote granulated nt 81 ^ 840 : poadered and 
crusned at ’i cut loaf. 84ft84«- A. 74 

ft He; off A, 7)4c; extra U, 7\^v; O yellow, 6^^ 
tlfUc; standard brands New ui lean* sugar*, opeu 
kettle, 64ft69sc by the barrel, granulated, 7 iu o 
8 c; cJanurd. 74«. 

SPICES—Pepper at lflftl7c; allspice at lflft 
104c. clovesat 20c; ginger at 8ft 10c;cinnamon, 
in mats, at 25c; nutmeg* at 63ft 73c; mac© at ojc. 
and cassia at 12c. 

SALT FISH—Demand good. Mackerel are 
very firm The sine* ot latere sixes ts practically 
exhausted In all prmcjpal market*. 


1 10QU> 

bL | half. 


bbl. 


XO.lb 
qua rj 


e i. b 


Bay No. 1. 

$20 00 $10 32 



Uue No* 2. 

III 00 

8 32 

$3 52 

si io 

Med. Shore No. 2. 

15 OU 

7 82 

3 32 

1 10 

Medium No. 3. 

7 50 

4 07 

l 8-2 

65 

Small No. 3. 

0 50 

S 67 

1 62 


WHITE FISH. 





too lb 

40-76 

It lb 



half. 

iiunr. 

kit . 

NO. 1. 

....... 

$6 25 

$2 83 

95 

Nn. 2.... 

. . 

5 50 

2 52 

86 

No. 3, or family ... 

. 

4 50 

2 12 

74 


Large Codfi-h, per lb . 

.Medium Codfish, per lb.. 

Boneless fish, tt> boxes. 

Roe herring, per b»d . 

Roe herring, per hall bbl .... 


...So 

.. a 60 


The Liquor .Market. 

Thera ha* been a smaller amount of trading la 
Kentucky whiskies, but the ton© has been Arm. 
Prices ar© quotably unchanged, but are to a la ge 
extent I ml e term mate, owing to wide variations 
of opinions. 

M'e quote as follows; 

Spritn;, 1 KH 0 , sweet-mash fra©....$1 70 
Spring, 1881, swe-l-mx'ih In b d. 424 
Spring, 1882, tweet-mash m b'd. 37J 
Spriug, lK8-k sweet-mash In b’d. :t.S 
Spring. 1880, sour mash. fra©.. 2 00 
Spring, 1881. sour-ma*h in bond. 50 
Spring. 1882. sour-ruanh in houd. 45 
Spring. 188.1. sour-masu m bond. 40 
Spriug. 1870. *our-um-h iu ooud. 3 25 
Uld good* prior to 1870... 5 00 

HlU 11 WINES-NVe quote at $ l 15. 

FRUIT BRANDIES —Apple-brandy, fall of 1882, 
$1 0Oft2 IU; new crop. SI 75ft 1 80; pencil- 
brandy, crop of 1882, $2 o6ft2 75; 

$2 20 4,2 75, 


new crop. 


The Drug .Market. 

The spurt in quinine last week was broken this 
week by free sales from Powers 6: Welghtman’s 
stock. *bieb, unexpectedly to the trod©, escaped 
tne Ore, ana prices wore reduced to th© previous 
scale. Tb© advance la morphine has been sus 
tained. Other articles ore quotably unchanged. 

Alcohol, $2 3J.iV- 715. Alum, p^r 1b, Aft. 14 c. 
Calomel, per 1b. 61 ft76c. Uamphor, pl*r tb, 2.»ft 
2Hc. CocMiuf.il. per lb, 40c. Chloroform, per (b. 
05c. Copperas, 00 U. 1 b, lc: copperas, kego, 1 b. 
3 4‘* Uuiu opium, per 1b, $4 25. Indigo, p»er 1 b, 
85ft00c. Licorice. Calabria, lb, 38c. Magnesia, 
em u., 2-os. Utsi.Jemiiugsi, 38c. Morphine. $1 25. 
Madder, per 1t», X2c. Oil— Castor, by th© bbl, 
best, gal. Si 45; No. 3 no. $1 43; sweet. 00 cft 
$1 73; olive, gal, $l 30ft3 50; sperrn, gal, $1 <K>; 
hiralta. gal. 55c; hank, gal, o.’Jc; bergamot. tt» 
(Sanderson’s). $2 35; cassia, 1b, SI 40: lemon. 1b 
(Sanderson’s>. $2 25. Qultiiue. V A W . ounce. 
$1 4<ift 1 <>u:in cads. $l4uftl 45; foreign nominal: 
Cinchimidia. P. & W , per ounce, 65ft70c. Ros 
In. bbl, $3'd,7 50. 8 o«p—Castile. Fr, pure, 84 

(ftOo. American bienrhuuat© soda, per lb. 44^'» 
soda, bicarb. Eng., casks, lb. 4?ift5c; 8<idm, -al. 
tt^, 2ft24c; soda, Osh. lb, 34 c. Halt©—Epsom, 
1b, 2ft3c. HnufT—Ounce package*. $7 pergros©: 2- 
ouuc®. $11; in tins, 1-ounce. $7 75; 2-os, $12; 
6-os bottles. $11 nercase. Brimstone, by the bid. 
3‘.j >,4o per 1b. Flour sulphur. If., 3i*ft4c. .ialt- 
peiro. commercial. Ib. 6ft 10c;saltpetre, pur©, lb. 
13ftl6c Turpentine, bbl, g*l. 30c; turpentine, 
c *us, gal. 4‘lc. Venetian red. Eng., bbl*. lb 24 
ft3c; Venetian red, Eng., keg,2b, 24 ft4c. iodmv. 


$2 25; iodi l© pot.nvi. $1 50. Cloves, 20c. Rhu¬ 
barb, powdered, UOcftSl. 

.Miarellnnrou* ProJuce. 

BUTTER— Privfs hnv© a g©neral rdranc©. We 
quote country common to fair, 1' ft lire: gui>d to 
prime. 20ft-'.c; choice roll«, ;4ft-' jc: Wisconsin 

rolls. 25c; dairy, 1 omlual, and choice creamery, 

3J4c. 

BEANS—Weqnot© medium country at $2 50ft 
2 «k», colored at $1 25ft 1 50, and black-eyed peas 
at$l 5.1 per bu. 

BEES WAX—We quote at 25c F 1b. 

CIDER—W© quote crab-apple cider at $I0ftI2. 
as to quality. 

KG(>S— Prices hav© fluctua ed. closing lower. 
Twrnty-flv* cases sol t on Call to day at lUc. We 
quote at 10c in patent cases. 

^ EATHER8—T here were no material changes. 
Mixed at 53c, and print© ;rooio :!0ft35o. 

FIELD SEEDS—Demand Uns been good, with 
tib'drrat© offering?, uud prices hnv© advanced. 
We quote clover at ^6 10 for common red, $6 30 
fto i5 for siiplmg. timothy nt $1 50. orchard 
grass et <2 25, red to • nt 60c. blue/rass nominal. 

FRUIT—Tho markrt lias been Arm, with a mod 
erately fair demand. W© quote green apples at 
$ift4 25 ^ bbl for ru*eq (8 and lenn'dlng* from 
•.tore. $ 3 ft 3 75 y bbl on arrival; dried apples, 
6 J 4 <q. 64 c, and dried peaches 6 c for halves un- 
pcvl©d. and 4} 4 ^oc for quarters. Cranberries 
nominal. 

G1N8ENG—There are no q-w feature*. W© 
quote at $1 46&1 IK) for medium to p Ime. 

HIDES AND 8KINS-?-Th©ro ar© no quotable 
changes. 

Prime drv flint hides. St 7b . 17 ft .... 

Damaged dry lllnt hides. V lb.... 14 ft .... 

Prune dry-salted hides, Ib. I2}idi .... 

Damaged dry-sailed hides, w tb.. 104 ft .. . 
Plrin© green-salted hides, U It*... 8iqft .... 

IiKtimgcd grecu-snltcd iitdv©. r> !b. 04 ft .... 

Prim© green . 7 ft ..., 

Dsms^cd green . oLjft 

Shevpskius, butchers’. .. 75 ftl 25 

Lai.it.skni©. country... 40 ft 80 

FURS aN D PEL IS—We quote the buying prices 
of No. 1 skins as follows: Raccoon. 70c; mink, 
cnaed, 50ft7-ic; mink. open. 4Uft50c; opossum. 
ca©4-U. 15ft20c: opossum, open, 15c: gray iox. 
cos©*.!. 70ft 73c: grar fox. open, 60ft70c: led (ox, 
cased. 80ft90c: red fox, open, '7uftt»0c: hlaok 
skunk, caned. 80ft00c: stntied skunk, cased. 25 
fttluc. white ©kuiik, cased, luftloc: wild cat, 20c; 
bou «:cat, 10c; mu-krai. 10 ftl 24 c; otter, cased, 
$4ftU; otter, open. $3ft4 50; bcuvcE large, $71ft3; 
ucvr skins, per lb,2 Gft25c. 

HONEY—We quo;© honey In tlie comb at 15c 
per lb, and strained at 84 2»* J c aud extracted at 
IlVu'itlk'c. 

KRAUT—Firm at quotatloos Ten lialf bar¬ 
rels sold on Call to day at $5 23 We quote at 
$10 5uftU per 32 gallon bbl and $5 25ft3 50 per 
half-bbl. 

POULTRY—The market hat been moderately 
active. ©liJi fair ©uppllcs. Olid priors nearly 
steady. We quote hen* at $3 i',.J 25 dressed or 
live, young chicken© al $2 50ftJ, according to 
«=lto and cndition. live or dit*ss«*d. per duz«*ii. 
Geese,^4ft5. Due Us. $3ft350. T.raeys. dreosed. 
13ft 1 4c per lb, aud 11 v© luc. 

NUTo—Teniietuie© whit© peanuts, 04®*c per 

; re 1 . Ac; Virginia. 10c. CheeluiiU, nominal, 
aud hlckoi v nuts at .>0ft76c. 

TAN BARK—$11 50ft i d per cord on track. 

VINEGAR—Chit r. $5ft0; pur© apple, $6, and 
white win©. $6 per bid. 

VEGETABLES—Irish potatoes have bcenqutet. 
Irregular and weaker. Irish potatoes. *1 40 for 
Ku sets an l $1 3o for Early Rose per bbl from 
idore. Seed potatoes. j|Jft3 25 for second 
growth. $t 40ftl .’>0 for Nortuern and $1 06 lor 
Netv York *took. Cabbage n *mitml. Ouiuns, 

2 23 per bbl from store, bweet potatoes. $2 7o 
ft3 25. 

WOOL—Quiet and nominal. Wo quote pulled 
at 28c and iub-wu*nrd at Uft.’loc per Ib. 

IMLcellHiieuua, 

BALING MATERIAL-Steady and unchanged. 
Association prices are a^ ioil<»« «: W© quote Jut© 
bagging a* follows: 14 lbs. iOfJc; Ini, lo^c; 
2 lbs. II 40 ; 24 lbs. i24c. Iron Lius, nominal. 

BAITING-No. 1. lu*Ju; No, 2, No. 3, 
8 ^ 40 - 


M 



drops, UiIMAo; rock c.mdy, 16ft 17c; loxenges, 
lhft-'tua; common pan wnrx, lbi/k’.'c; flue do. 
28ft3oc; plain cream work. 18ft20c: decorated 
creatn work, 10ft 20c; cordial, good, 22ft 2 ,5c. 

CEJlfc.NT. LIME, PLANTER, BRICK. *c.- 
Louibville cement. 80c p-n* bbl at mill aud 00c de¬ 
livered in round lots, and loo higher iu *mnll lots, 
and lime at 80ft85c per bbl Piaster at $2ft2 25 
per bbl; plasterers’ hair, per bu. 25&30e: Por* 
t. r’s fire br.ck at $23ft30 pt»r l.UUO; first and 
third Ola** facing brick*. $l2ftlb; fancy-auaped 
bricks. $!0ft20. 

CANNED GOODS—Tomatoes, 21hs. 05cft$l;3- 
Ibs,f l 10ftl 26. Peaches 2-It,s, $1 7U>ftl 70: 3-:bs, 
$1 73ft2 15. Apples. 2-Jbs. 00cft$l; 3-lbs. $1 .*15 
ftl 60 ; do. gals. $.1 A0ft4 Blackberries, 2-tba, 

t 81ft l 20. Goo.4©iKfrrlrs. $1 20. .Strawberries, 
l lOrfrl 20. Raupbernos. $1 75. Cherries, red, 

1 40ft 1 50. St 1 in -sit,reen peas, 

00c ? 51.15. Corn, lK»cft<l 35. Ttneapplra. $1 6?> 
ftStWJ.do, Bahama, 5(Jift J 75. Pears, 2-Ibs, 
$13Uifcl5U. Salmon. 1*18, $1 30ft! 70;2-lbs. $2To 
ft3. Lobster, 1 *It>, $l 75ft 1 85;2-1hs.$3. .Mackerel, 
1-lb, $i .dj.^l 40. rumoler Jvhh*». buftu tc. Cove 
oystere, 1-lb. 0Ocft$l 10; 2-ths, $l 25ft 11*0. Sar 
dines, American, iq<, $7.>0ft8 5J; 4s S15* 
dines, imp., $ lift 13; 4s, b23ft20. Fie 

pearlies. 30u/,I 40 perdoz. 

CORDAGE —Manillar*»jj«. 10ftI64e; Sisal. 104 
ft l Ut; cotton rotx*. 14ftl4H>e: trotiine. 20 
214 c; -t igin^ . 234b; soah lope, JOftlbc; ©oiq© 
twine, 28c. 4 

COAL—Pittsburgh lump. 14c; Kentucky. 10c; 
Laurtd, 11c;ccue, Uftlflc; Pittsburgh, afloat, 8a. 

COTTON YARN, CAN f)LEWICK. CARPET 
CTPAlN - We quote Southern yarns as follows on 
round lots to tne trade, net: No. 400, fd^e; 300, 
©c; UU6, re; 700. 64 c. Carpet chain, white, 16ft 
17c; colored, 2X4^224*'; twine. No. 1, iUftVMct 
No 2. 17 ft 1 H, : two-ply. 164c; No. 3. 144c. 
Caudle wick. 18ft20e: coverlet warn, 22 c. 

FRUIT JARS—Standard. $7 50 tor quarts and 
$16 50 for half gill«»ns; Masou’s, $12 for quarts 
and $15 for half gallon'. 

FOREIGN FKUl To— Thoro aro no quotable 
ch mg s. 

Len\ona, Medina, per bmc. $! 00 ft5 00 

Lemons, Malaga, per box. 5 Oo ft4 OU 

Prunes. **'“ 

Dates. .. . 

t urrants .. 

Unistu©. Muscatel, loi’w© 

Kai>ms, Loudon, injer.new. per 

box . . . s 50 

Raisins, Valencia, new. per tb 8! 

Fig . new. . 17 

Bananas, W. Indian, per bunch I 50 
Bananas, Aspimvall. per bunch *2 00 

Cocoontits, per 100. 0 60 

Pineapples, per do* . . 3 00 

HOMINY ANDGR1T8—Hominy $J 40 and grits 
$3 50 per Obi. 

LEA 1 liER--Oak eotaat 30ft33c; Buffalo slaugh¬ 
ter nt 26ft31c; hemlock at 23<&2©c; hornets at 
32ft38c; bridle at S20ft3rt per dozen; skirting 
at 30ft40o prr tb; French calf at $1 40A1 80 
per Ib; city caJ t at U0eft$l 20 per lb; city kip at 
o5ft7.>c per U>: upper xip at ^l0ft4U per dozen. 
LU.VI. ER— No. 2 coumuq boards, rough 

Or dressed.$18 00 

Fencing. 8-mch, rough..— 18 00 

bound aura boards, 10 aud r2 inch, rough. 20 00 

bh<'©tiug, lough or driof-ted . 15 00 

Poplar joists, scantling, etc..under 15 feet 

long ami twelve menus wide, rough. 

Hemlock ... 

bound common, loch, dressed. 

Shelving, inch, dro «ed. 

Third-class, iu. h. dressed . 

Second*claa3. Inch, dressed. 

Add $2 per 1,000feet for thick to the third and 
second clear. 

Second-cbiM whit#pin©flooring. dreft»©4..$50 00 
Third-class white pme flooring, dressed... 32 50 

Common white pine fl »url«*g, drasped. 25 Oo 

Second clear yellow pine flooring, dressed. 35 00 

Third clear reflow pin©. 30 00 

Common yellow pm© ... . 22 30 

( dear pin® ©Mingle-*, 16 inch... 4 52 

Star A shingles (no:irlv clear) . 4 00 

Six inch, clntr butt t o«**d> . 2 1*0 

Five inch, clear butt (fairly good). 2 50 

Common or cull shincles . 1 50 

Eighteen inch slungli's. clear .. 6 00 

Eighteen Inch. 6 to 10 inch dear butt..... 3 25 

Best poplar shingles ...... 2 30 

Clear poplar w i-nth©r-boarding, rough— 15 00 
Clear poplar weather-board ing. dreaded.. 17 00 

Good pine weather-boarding, drensed-- 20 00 

Fopl.irlatbs . 3 00 

Pine laths . 3 65 

MANUFACTURED TOBACCO-Tlm market 
has oer<n actue, ami price* run© ruled stead v. 

Fine lbs . 

Fine ft^ . . 

Flue twist an J coll . 

Medium twist uud coil __ 

Common twist and coil. 

Medium Ibt aud 11 inch . 

Common flg . . 

NUT5—Retail selling price*: Aimon ts—Tarra¬ 
gona. 23ft25c; do Ivica. 22 ft23c: do soft-shelled. 
i»er lb. 23ft24c. Naples walnuts, per n>, J8ftl!)u; 
Filberts per tb. 17ftlde: Brazil nuts, por tt>. 16c; 
peanuts, Tennessee, tic for tvd and 6c for whjto; 
Virginia. 10ft 13c; pecan*. 12ft 17c. 

NAVAL STORES-Oakum. 84ftllo per th; 
pine tAx, $3 75 for Wilmington packages; $3 per 
dozen gallon cans, an 1 $5 for Urgo bid*; ro*iu, 
per bbl. $2 50ft4 50; pitch, per bbl. $4; turpen¬ 
tine. per gallon in bbls. 36c. 

OILS—There are no quotable changes. 

Unseed, raw ... 55ft5fl Gasoline. MTV 23 

_Do.,bcll©d..Mft W Castor oil No. 2 to 

No. 1. $1 35ftl 45 

. - .... W 

13 
14 

18 
10 


17 50 
16 00 
20 00 
25 00 
45 OO 



Lard oil. extra.. 75 

Lard od. No. 1.. 65 

Lard oil. Nn. 3.. 50 

MlivV* oil.32ft53 

Lubricating oil 10ft 14 

hank oil . 53 

Straits oil. . 65 

Betnein©. ... 11 

Gasoline, U3V.. 11 

Gasoline. "74*... 13 


C*ial oil. HO* 

Coal oil. 130V... 
Cool oil. 150^.... 
Coal oil. 100V... 
Coal oil. 175* ... 
Ex. refd cotton- 
send oil . .> 

Hef'd couon-sced 

oil...... 


PAPER—Rag wrapnlnr. 4ft44c: straw wrap¬ 
ping, 3&34 0 » news. (Uti; book, uUft 12c. 

POWDER AND SHGl’-W© quota rifl^ powder 
at $5 25 and blasting $2 50 per keg. Patent shot 
at $1 80ft 1 85. 

PAINTS and COLORS-Polut—Whit© lead. In 
kegs, strictly pure. Uc, and standard at 5.50c. Col¬ 
or#—American red lead,deeper B>, Etiglinh orange 
minerals 12c p»*r ?b; EnglUu Venotbin red. l^qC p«*r 
lb; French rochelle alter, 2c per Ib: Paris white, 2c 
per lb: Spanish w tilting, 00c uer 100 tbs. 

RAGS—Clean cotton rags, 2 ft 24 c per {b, anil 
woolen, lc. 

SALT—We quote Ohio river and Kanawha. 7-bu 
bbls, at $1 50. Sag in .w, $1 20: 280-pound bar¬ 
rels at $1 15, aud $2 (or Syracuse dairy, all Ire© 
on board. 

TINNERS’ STOCK- 

Charcool ICW. 10 x 14 . $6 50 

Charcoal 1C, 10x14. 7 00 


Charcoal IC, 10x14, best.. 7 00 

Cbarrottl ICW. 12x12. 6 75 

Chiu coal I».*, 12x12, good. 7 25 

Charcoal IC, 12x12. brat . 7 75^ 

Cliarioal IC, 14xl!,be.-»t.13 00^ 

C.haiuoat IC, 16x15. bc-^t ... . 16 00 

t bareosl ICW. 14x20. bright . G 50 

( harcoallC. 14x.D. gooiJ bright . 7 00 

Charcoal IC, 14x26. best bright. 7 25 

Charcoal IC. 14x26. roofing, good. 6 25 

Charcn.il IC. 14x30. roofing, best. 6 50 

Charcoal IC, 14x2J, rootlur. 31 F .. M 25 

Charcoal IC, 20x28. rooflug, boat.13 00 

Charcoal 1* . 20x28. 31. F .17 50 

Cok© IC, 10x14, Y. and equal . 6 00 

Coke 10. lOx'in. J. B. and e.mal--10 50 

The usual difference for X’a Ptrlb. 

Block tin, Bauca . 27 

Block tin. Struts ....... . 24 

block tin, Englub L. and F . 24 

Bar tiu. 38 

Pig h-ad . 5 

Bar lea l. .. 0 

Russia sheet iron. Nos. 0, 10, 11. 1*2. 13. 14 

and 15. ... 14 

lion wire, per bundle. 63 tt»s, list price, 5b per 
cent, discount. 

Lacquered wire, per bundle, 53 lbs, ii3t puce. 
60 per cent discount, 
brazier’s copper, 2fc. 

WINDOW GLASS—Thep* are no u**w feature*. 
We quot- subjrrt to a cli«count of 00 per cent, for 
•single sixes, and ill) and lo per cent (or double. 

Size* tlx« to lux 15—For AA ... $8 25 

Othor grades and nixes iu the usual proportion. 

For A.$8 25 

For B .. 7 50 

Si* s 11x1$ to lax*2t . .For AA . 0 25 

For A . n 50 

l or B. 8 00 

For c . . 

WOODEN WARE—W« quote bucket* at $1 60 
ftl U0: tubs ai $5 50, 6 50 and 7 5U; well-buckets 
at $3 50; waabbourds at $,ft 2 50. 


The Dry Good* .Markot. 

There Fas beep a quiet state of trade, and the 
scateof distribution has betui evidently influenced 
Injuriously by the execrable condition of the 
weather. Prices are stationary. 

BROWN SHEETINGS AN D sHIRTING$-«Great 
Western 4-4. (ftlc; Columbia 4-1, OUl*: Hoo-Jer 
4-4. 3Vgr; Tii"u, dj^e: Banow, 6 ^; Pepperell 
lu-4. 22 U 0 ; Peppered E. 7]qc: Pepparell '. 6 ? jc; 
Pep pare. 1 O, 6 vj,c; N, b^c; PluewooJ, 6 J 40 ; Ten- 
npremium, 0o; (..uerokec. 4Ric; Pioneer, 
6 >fec; Windsor P. ottre; GraiiilavUlu E L. rikje. 

BLEACHED SUHtTINGS -AndroAcorgm. 36* 
iueb. 8 c: Fruit 01 Loom, be: liope. 7 Jqc: Louv 
dale, 8 ;iic; Lmisdale cambric. ll! 4 c; MUkOttville, 
6 c: WamsutU, lul^c; New York MUD, l<Rj|c: 
Pride of Weri. HUct Pepprrcll 10-4. 25c; i*-4, 
22Ho; 8-4. 20c; 7*4.18c; 6-4,17c; Blackstonc,7 
HlU 4*4. 8 t 4 ; do. 7-8. 7Vic. 

PAPER (2 A >1 URIC—Man villa, Qc: b. S. A Sons. 
Gc; Masoiivill©. 6 c: Wai rou, tic; high color*, io 
higher: Sitcun IS, lower. 

PRINTS—Light spring work. Cocheco, fle: 
Cocbttco robes, 6 c; American. Pacific. 6 c; 
Sled River,5V^o:< oue*io^it, 5l^c; Merrimac, 
Glouce*tr'i\ i>Hec; oimpscu, 6 c; plum black, tic; 
Allou, 5J4c; Richmond, 6 c; Harmony. 49ie; Ar 
noid, 6 c; Windsor, fle: Manchester. Uc; llumd- 
ion. 6 c: Dunnekl. 6 c; llartel, tic; Knickvi bociccr, 
5V4c; Balmoral. 4^.ic; Fenwick, 4l^c. 

BAGS— 2 -bu seamless— naimer. 818 50: United 
Statra, $17 50; Xou laruiii, $21ft 22 ; Penn iltli*, 
$22ft24; Otter CroelC. $18 5u. 

OSN ABURGS—Six-ox, 8 c; 7-ox, 0 c; 8 -ox. Olfr. 
CORSET JEANS-Androscoggin, R»ck- 
pert, 7c: Laconia. 8 c: Siulalk, 8 c; Naumkeag sat- 
teen. h^jc; Puquot, h^c. 

TiClvb — Cuneataga, ex.. 15r: do. 7-8. 1 -Ruc; 
Gold MtdaJ, 4 4 . 14c; CCA. 7-8. 12c; AF, 4 4, 
fancy. 18c; BF. y 6 . faucy. loo; Ci\ 4 4. Ulc; 
la?wuiion, 36-inch, lopjc; do, 32-inch, 13J-ic do, 
W inch. 12 J* : Huroiiiou, D. llJc 
SPOOL COrrON-J. A P Coat*. 55c; Clark’*, 
John. Jr., 55© ; Clara © O. N. T.. 55c; Willimm- 
Uc, 6 -cord. 55c; Green <£ Daniel, 27c; Hoiyoite. 
25c; Stafford’s, 25c. 

JEANS—Louisville. 25ft43c. 

STRIPES— Amodteag. 164ft ll^c; American, 
10c; Columbian cheviou, 7jq<i,8u; Evvrott* 
do, 10 c _ 

The Iruu Trade. 

Tltere baa ljeen a very alow trade In pig lron.% 
and the feeling is evidently less confident and 
firm. The scale of aaking prices 14 unchanged, 
but dealer* are not holding firmly, and conces¬ 
sion* are attainable on all grade*. 

Merchant irons have been quiet, with prices 
stationary. Nails are in better aupply and have 
been selling lower. 

FOUNDER? IRONS. 

No. 1 Hanging Rock, charcoal . .$25 00&74-00 
No. 2 Hanging Rock, charcoal. .. 22 50 ft23 i*0 

No. 1 Souuivi n. clull coal .. ^21 00 

No. 2 Southern, charcoal . (^lU 50 

No. 1 Hauging Rock, stouecoal and 

coke . 10 50ft20 00 

No. 2 ilangnlg Rock, stonecoal and 

coke . . 18 50ft20 OO 

No. 1 Southern, stoueconl and cok® .ft dll U0 

No. 2 bout trro. sionecooi and cake . ..^,.18 50 

Sliver Gray .. .< V?( 17 50 

‘•American Scotch” . ... 18 00ftIB OQ 

MILL in08S. 

No. 1 charcoal, cold-short and neutral. ... 10ft20 
No. 1 stcr-coai and coke, cold short and 

neutral . . .. ft 17 

No. Ostonecoa. tfi* coke, cold-short and 

neutral. .. .. . 16 30 

No. 1 Missouri red -short. 22 ft23 

Whit- and mottled, cold-short and neutral. Hi ft 17 
Sh>»* No. 1. 5*21 


Sloes No. 2. 

.. (^10 

bU*©» .>v». 3. 

. 18 50 

CAR-WHEEL IRON—Cold blar.t 

Hang- 

in? Rock. 

.28J132 

Cold-blast Al© ham a aud Georgia . 

.2 5ft 20 

1 old-bluftt iv' iiLucky. 

.20ia30 

Hanging Ruck W\ B — —.. 

.244,5 



SUEET IRON-According to giad*». 

Ruv.ii... — .$0 14ft 

Planished A in©'lean‘Russia-”... . lu 

Nos. 10 to 14 bulled Iron. 2 7 

Nos. 15 to 17 boiled iron. 2 60: 

Nos. 18 to 21 boded iron . 3 10' 

Nos. 22 to 24 boiled iron.. 3 

No 26 boiled Iron . . 3 4u< 

No. *27 boiled iron. 3 

STEELS—Englishca^t, 10ftl8c: Ameri- 

can. ...12ft 14c 

Extra sixes nnd quality additional. 

R’d machinery. 6 ^ 80 ; bpring. 7ft 80 

Sttcle blister, 7ft8c: Aineiican blister. 8 ft Pc 

Rolled lay and toe calk.. 8 ft be 

Hammered lay and toe calk ... . Oftltlc 

Tire, according to size and brand. lift 80 

Plow steel slabs . 4 ^4)4c 

BAR IRON—We quote at $100ft210 per 10U lbs, 
mcLording to quality. 

BARBED FENCING WIRE-Galvatiixcd, O^ft 
7 c; painted, 5>(ft0c per It 
CARPJaGE BJH’ 8 —Eighty per cent, discount. 
NORWAY IRON— 

Bars and ship *a_ 0 c Nall rod .8ft0c 

HORSE SHOES—Leodlng brands, $4 50fti 75, 
ami mute shoes $J higuer. 

HOR3E-9HOE NAILS—Leading brands, 10ft 
20c for 81 ; buialier six^s additiouaJ. Discount for 
qu ntdy. 

CUT N AILS—Tenpeuuloe $2 C0ft2 63, according 
to sixe ol order. 

IRON HARROW TEETH—3V*q>4a 
SCREW AND STRAP HINGES—3l£ft4*-£ac¬ 
cording to sue. 

CLEV1CE8—Melkla’s wrought plow olevicse, 
5J4ftUc. _ 

Horae and Muir .Marltrt. 

[Reportedby Scognan, Hudson tt Co., Sixteenth 
arid Mon streets.] 

The demand for all claves of stuck has Im¬ 
proved since our last report, though prices remain 
about tne same, bales me piai \vo«k. 2 uo head; 
receipts, 175 head; tin ibe market. 300 bead. \V© 
quote: 

Fourteen hAnd mul^s, 4 to 7 years old. $P0ftl00 
Fourteen aud a half hand mules, 4 to 7 

vear* old..— . . .. 11 Oft 120 

Fifteen hand nudes. 4 to 7 years old 120ft 130 

Fifteen and a half hand mules, 4 to 7 

years old.*. 130ft 160 

Sixteen hand mules. 4 to 7 yeirscld 160ftl85 
Sixteen and a half hand mules, 4 to 7 
yea.ru old. . 185ft210 

REPORTS BY TELEGRAPH. 

O MSNJSKA L M AUK BIS, 


Chicago. 

Ctncaeo. March 8 —Flour is steady and un¬ 
changed; good iu choice winter y* U0ft5 85; jiuft 
spring wheat $4ft4 .>0; Mmnreota uaarc's ff5o 
duo 25; paienu iS 50ft« 25. Rye flour $ tft.i 33. 
Buckwheat flour $.’> Taftd .'>0. Tucre or© some 
export or lers on tne market awaiting art expect¬ 
ed reduction of irelj-ht ratra m-xt week; .» # IU0 
sacks*uld Cor export. Wi.eat, demand active 
nnd prlcei strong ami higher; short free buyers 
and reports o( d image to grjwiug winter wheat 
crops lendvd to gne adUirtotinl flrmites* to thu 
market; opened 94ftV$e Jdglier. later receded 
but rallied ogam aud advanced )gc. closing y^c 
higher than yesterday: sales ranged: seller March 
bl^ftO.mc, closing at D.'ftH2J^c; seller April 02 
ftOdrae, cubing at 029^ft62H|c: seller May 9.‘ft 
9844c, closing at t»74kc. seller June 9*$aiAU04£c, 


winter bbouajl cura, uemotid active, but 
.prievs un>ettTed aud higher; the shorts corervd 
freely, and outside buying orders were large; th,- 
market opened higher than the closing 

ou ’c all y»* erda>. inter Ueclm**d ^§c. but rulUrd 
lc, and closed 1^(0 higher thau Ui* c oring on 
’C'iiatijfw vesterdav ;salra ranged: Cash 52fto3Uc; 
seller March 51 h»ft'».c, closing at 52e; seller 
April Si^ftn Jyjc. closlu^ ut 5J|dc; seller May 
3uuft5.'stc. closing at o >?<c: seller June 5.ft 
5>c. closing ut .s'.w(c; seller July , 

closing at 5V<ttc. Oats, demand light but iioIu.mh 
are Arm nnd prices higher; sales ranged: 

Cash32ft3g}fc; seller Maroh 31 kiftttilgc; seiler 
April 3U4ftoi44.!, closing utilise, seiler May 
3oVift35^c, closing at -t »iEe; sell r June IVHtft 
3u C ; seller car 2'JVyft2.>*e. Ryo is dull at 
584 jC. Barley, demand fait and market tirui at 
61c. Flax M?ed is firm al $1 58 on track. Pork 
is iu fair demand but 11 regular: to© market open- 
t*d 25c higher. Inter receded 15ftl7Rjc, but ral¬ 
lied ngalu THftlOe. and dosed S'e.idy; 
ranged. Cosh $17 TUft 17 75; seller Mar$17H2ts 
ftl«. closing at ?17l»Uft»7 U2U. ocher June 
$17 90 ft 18 05. closing at $l7 9T^%ftl8. Lard ih 
quiet and nominally umriuiugrd; sales ia g**d: 
( aril $0 30ftu 3»; >©di-r May $D 45ft U 50. cloning 
nt $d 47B» C f.O 50; seller June $9 52b(ft9o7U. 
closine at $0 55ft057Vs- seller July $9 OuftO 62U. 
Bulk meat© are quiet: shoulder© 7.25c; short rib 
hide© y. Jjo; short dear -Ides 0.85c. Butter i« 
quiet and unchanged; flue creamery 3.-ift38c; 
dairy 2Gft2eo. Eggs are quiet and unebauaed ut 


2hftt>lc Whisky I* steady and unchanged al 
t • l L Receipts: Flour 1 4.(.00 barrels: wlieat ,'L- 
000 b 11 .\Uvia, coru 1 i.i.OOo bushels; »»#t« . 14 .OOO 
bushels: ryeo.oUO bushels: bai ley 22.000 bush 
rR .Shipments: Flour I 0 .O 1 XI barrels: wheat 14.- 
Oou bushels, corn 14 1.000 bushela; ouU 18.000 
buihela; rye 4.500 bushels; uiriey 15,000 bush¬ 
els. 

New York, 

Nrw York. March 8.—Flock—T he market Is 
dull: receipts 10. 0u0 bnrrals; exports 2.400 bar¬ 
rels; supernne Skate aud Western $2 r*0ft3 40 ; 
co umon to goo l extra $ \ 4 Jft t 75; while wheat 
extra $0 25ft0 50; gootl to choice S’* 8 wft 6 50; 
fancy do $7 40; extra Ohlo$:t4 JftO; St. Louis 
*3 .»0<Jt6 2 *»; ^(imic«ota patent uroce** $5 75ft6, 

Gnam— Wheat, option* op-ned strong odd ad- 
vauceti but aftenvatd Iwsram© weaker 

uud droiqe-d ba k closing qmet and 

at»-.«dy; receipts 10.0L0 bu<lir.»; exports 5(i.i-u0 
otishcU; 5o 2 -pnnc :1 U 6 f 4 ftl U 8 ; ungraded red 
M.tc: No 4 red 92:; ungraded while >1 12: 
No 2 whit*- UHc; No 2 red seller Msroh, 
siles of 58,000 bumicls nt jl dr : tkftl O.yj,. 
closing at $1 07?k: 'teller Apr I. .^nles t»f 
3 j 4 900 bimho a nt \1 • V^hiftl OUm. ' , !o«inr nt 
$l 09L: scilvr May. soltw of 2 , 1:1 *.000 bushels 
at$l U>jjftl 12BL closi.ig at $1 12. seller June, 
s .eso 3 4.060 btrihcL nt ei 13. closing 

at $1 12ve. Com. *pot lots nreVecand ••pt o % 
higher and firm; receipts 11.000 bushels; 
exports 17.060 bushels uugrmled 5st^ft«i2c; >0 3 
6 uft • c: uteauu t «ti»^v: *nu 2 6 (J 4 ft* 2 >V#o: N <»2 
•viler .March cioriug at CJtpr; seller 

April 6 : l tft(174iC, cloring at 0244 c; seller May 
6 >}iftt)3jj|C, clo-mu seller .Innr.* 

fl closing at ©viler July 64jkft65)4d« 

Clo-iiig at »L>Hi\ Onta are a trifle higher: rc- 
crip’s 14.000 bmihels;exports none: mixed Wrui- 
erji 4 >ft41c; whit* ^ catcru 4 IftinLc. 

Hat—I s steady with a (air uc.aaud at 45ft50c 
V c\\ t. 

H<c ■— 4 re n"b»* but firm 

UitocKKics—Coffee, syot (air Rio is dull and 

t. au. option* u*, ug.. 1 . ingner out quiet: sal**s 

of 250 bag© NoVRiorellpr March at 10 . 10 c:- 

b gs seller April ©t 10 ToftlO.uOc: 2.250 bags 
seller May at 10 . 80 c; 4 uon bug* seller Jure at 
10,85c: 2.75'J h gs teller July a l .©5c: 1.0<0 
bare arller Aiixil-’. nt 10 JiOr. Sugar I** quiet hut 
steadv: common to prim© l« li -ld nt 7VHft74©c; 
muscovado cootrifugal 7*)j,c; fair to 

good raim ng u 1 i d at 5^$ft5>4c: ivn&v.i 11 
urmer; extra C 6 : ift*;Lc: nmi- extra G dFift 
6 ^c;ynlow 5 - 4 ft L.« : off A 6 >„<a 7 !(ic; centnf- 
ugd dV^ft'i-v 4 o. mold A "f N c; Mandard A :Lo; 
conft»ciiont-rs’ A7.« luc: cm loaf and crushed 
7*>.c; powdered 7 ll-luft^-^c; granulatril ;t$r; 
cubes 744 C, Molasrses UqumL a,al unchanged ; 
Cu> a t^> arrive. 304 : New Orlean-* Kquot a 3 i 
ft 6 c: 50 test refining 24c; 1‘orto Rino :kif(th45c; 
Cardenas24c flat; Havana 25(jc; English l«laji;U 
35ft4t*c Hit© 1 -Arm m-l moucraudy active;do- 
m<*rii 3 -TuifcTc: Ivanroon 44(e. 

rxraoLkvii— Is -1 rmiw: United Fipe-Uua$l 02; 
crude refln**tl 8^0 for 104 ir*:. 

Tallow—I»< itca . nrime city 74jft7 b 10c. 

Roaix—ia firm at $1 4 <V 1 -> 0 . 

TfnpEXTTSE—i*. uuil at 36c. 

Eoos—Western fresh are dull and !ow*r al 
21 left : c. 

Leathpr—I s Arm an 1 in good «letna*id; Imm* 
RcU sulr, Buenos Ayreii and RluOraude light, 
middle and heavy weights 2 ft'Mujc. 

Wool— Is <1 nil M»d \***ak: dmnratir fleece 32ft 
45c pulled ISftlOc; unwashed I0ft2sc; Texas 11 
ft27c. 

FHoviaioN,^—Pork Is d»d and nominal; n©w 
men* -p.»r $ir I ftl7 I»2tv: r\ -nrback $2i)ftVU #5; 
Westarti family mass $14 15 , Beef •>% quiet 

ana uijc a‘u^e.,:©x ra uiess $12. Cut meats dull 
nn*l nominal; long cl -nr middle© u- s c. laird 
|d©rtdy: prim© utru’ii ? • 5ri; seller Marun 50 55ft 
1* 57; &el|.«r April j'J 5 fttt 5U; ©flier May 86 6 . ft 
0 i* 6 ; ^iler June tit 74. ©viler July 56 ©o -j, 

U 8 .*. 

Burrca—Is firm and in goo 1 demand at 0 ., 37r. 

Co ness— Detnnnd (air aud market flrm; West¬ 
ern flat 1 Gift 13c. 

Pto Don—U dull; Scotcu $20 50 *2,23 50; Amer¬ 
ican $ir . ;/ 22 . 

Lsxo— Is nrm; common 4.10c. 

Tlx—Is quiet but ‘i:«*adv. 

Baltlinure. 

BAi.TiMoar., ?Ij| h 8 —Flour i ■ nr. a ly wi’h v 
m»jd-iat»- df-mrilnt; Howard street nud Webern 
ftUperilne $2 .5Uft 3 50: extra $U75&4 75; family 
75. Wheat. Western Is fnlriy acrivo and 
liig ier; No 2 winter red *pot ^1 Oo^ftl 0l* l 4: 
seller March $1 uUbtd: ©idler April i-F 
11044; seller May HHftlDf; seller June 
Si I246ftl •wll rJulv <112 bid. Corn, 

es:©» n is flj mcr and dull; Wes ©rn mixed >p «t 
nnd si'llnr Mnren 58 • b'd; seller \\>rd flflMi-'d'Hc: 
seller May Ut»mft0,4(o: eurilor June 6 lu bid; 
■feamei ■ ■ 1 Date are q t 1 • 1 

Westoi n wldtcl iftl^c;do mixed 4 *ft4 c:Peun 
syjvsnia 42 vj, 4 c. Rye is . .. at .2ft4 o. Hay 
in -n «*n it/ -1 prime to ehoi •© renniylvauja aud 
Maryland $1 ift 1 • ! a» tun. Provisions are dull » '6 
J«*w,. t n MesHporlc oit s -i : .»••.» Si*. Built 
meats, eboul m- and clear rib packed ft 

lu*qc. Bacon, shoulders 44 c; clear rib shii-a 1 c. 
Hams 14V<tftl5c. Lord, reflued luV«c Bultrr 
firm v esuin packed 10 ft 2 c,creamery 5&.I c. 
Eggs are lower ami quiet nt 2 < *. 1 rtrolcum is 

UiiciiMn^ed‘ refined 8 ydtttijjc. Coffee i» un ■< 1 - 

«*«1: Rio cargoes, orJIunry 1 > fair. ll‘ 'uii2^.c. 
Sugar is lino langedt A soft 7‘tc, WhUky s mi 
cammed at$11 ftl 1 J 4 . » r > • iverpo -1 

n-r n en m« i are uull; cotton 3 10d; flour Is 3d 

r r barrel: grain ud. Re iri ur .i.iuo 

rias; wheat 1 ; nun bmdu'iv u*»rt| lb.OviU bush- 
Cl ; littt . 1 , 1.00 LiuilioL. r r l.UUi bipibvlv bimv 
meats: Corn i.uuo uamu lt .i des: W beat 13.1.- 
000 bushels; corn Ua.vOi busneis. 

l*llUadel>uis. . 

PflTLAnn.rnt v. March 8 .— Flour R flrm with a 
moderate liemand: nosy 1 vanla (audit i5; Ohio 
clear $5 5(»; do straight $5 7 »ft>f: winter patents 
$6 10 ftfl 50: Minnesota bakers, ch ar $5: d« c mn*© 
clear$5 5u. Minnesota p item process <6 50^678. 
Rye flour In steady at, $3 50ft3 Ot*. Wheat open- 

I 

llrm; N** 2 rrd «cllcr March $1 0 1 0S>i: seller 

April $1 Oh^ftl |l‘U; seller May $t I ‘ ->ifti l .; 
seller Jute* Jji 12‘<tftl 13. Cum iltlVun ttl j 4 ftbj,; 
ui*d» r 1 • tt-r repu i© from thu We>t, hut neluief 
ftpvc. latoni nnrfthlppor- were dhpo*« i tu opu- 
ra*.©; car 1 udud an l weaker: no grade 56ft 
57c: rajeeitni veflow Mkj: No -i yellow 66 c: steam- 
erflle; sad rnixc 1 seller March seller 

April 6 it 4 .r?.tto* 4 c; seller .Mny 614% y-dl4^c: seller 
June 0 iV 6 ftU 2 » 4 C. liatr. qu et hut steady: No 3 
whit© 4 :* 4 : Nn 2 wmte 4 ;t4'A44<». I’rov ©ion* 
steady, liref. city family $14: do packed $1 1 0 

No I mess 51 .;India uivss, f.o. b.. $ 2 » .0 Pork, 
new tii css al»» 5-.': prnu»- new 

11 e . ure v-'rri $sftK .*5 Hums, smokeil 1 »fti c. 
Lord quiet: city reflned $»() 2 .ft lu -ilft; strain 
$ lb; butch n*’ luos© f» 25ftb 50, Butti-r 
m in goud demand; ciwnnaery extras 3 ftfi c: 
nr-.ts 3jr,*3.V; N«w York b’.at© and UraJfurd 
county, Penn., tubs 2ric; do ttniu 18-&20c: NN ©st¬ 
ern extras 20 ft .'2c; do good to choice iaft lt»c; 
»r«ih bftlOc. Eg n *s aro quiet; extras 20c 
Cheese, prices firm and market fairly active; full 
creamery 13NVestcrn fair to good 11 U 
ftJ2Vfc. Petroleum is 
Hf' “ 

bushels. Shipments: Wheat 3.000 busbeis; corn 
5,uu0 bUhucia. oats IU.UjU uushels. 

St. Louis. 

St. Locts. March 8 —Flour !« unchanged; 
family 84 15ft4 .iu; choice $4«W-t4 70; fancy 
85 25ft /» 65. NVheat was a *hadi? better; No 2 
red hi 01*14 r\ 104^ cash: 10-^ seller Mareh; 

il il >4 ml 1 1 vs seller May; £1 iu>sal (O^selt-r 
June; ?1 ul^ft 029 s *tulrr July; 6874 itOJVtic 
sel.erycar: No 3 red Slftl 00Hr, Corn*wo© 
higher: No 2 mixed ^old at 48t^ft40V^c ca^h; 
48 r 4f seller MarCii; it^jc seller Api‘U;5i|&ft5li4Q 
seller May: 552 seller June. 53^ft5*Hvo 
seller Juiv. Gat* « era v-rv -low; 3 i^sft;*4c cai*n; 

s* \Wr Majr. Rvr is ■ v«v at 5714ft 
5t»Hc bid. Barley is q iK i at 5 .ft80c for Araerl 
can. Lead ls» **miv at .* a5v. Butter ts un- 
cuamteu ; cr-amery 30ft3(c; dairy 20ft2;c. Eggs 
am-osiei al «;c. Flax seed i» »*»ow at $1->u. 
□ay 11 unouanved; prairie 10 50; timothy $11 
ft 15. Bran is tin iiirtgmt at K c at the mill. 
f:orn meal 1 * 01 del at $2 50. Whisky « s.eady at 
51 16. Prevision* ure si *w with ouiy a s nail jub 
trade. ForK$i7A;u. Bulk meats, long clear side t 
W. 10 ftfll 4 c: short rib sides tR4 a 0-35c; snort cleur 
sides uv%ft55q. Bacon. Jung clear aidra U.txvc; 
short rib hides flfifth 66c; short clear sidra 
Hi^c Lard Is nominal nt $6 25. Receipts: 
Flour 7,000 barrels: w heat JWJ'OO bushels; coru 
151.000bushels; oats si.' 00 bushels: rye o »*: 
barley • "«*♦* bushel-. ShipmrnU: Flour ?<,OO0 
barrels; wheat I4.t'0w hu-i.ci», corn l vouu buau- 
cia, oats i,UO^ bushels; ryo none; barley none. 
Nrw Orleans. 

Nrw Orlcaxs. March M.—Flour, family $5ft 
5 25; ingn grides nr© ra-icr nt $5 62J4ft0 0‘>. 
Coru is in goed demand out oasie-r ami ©cattrei 
luix^-d bJd04r: will © 65c. Oats nr© dull and 
lower cnokf 44V* • Corn meal nuriv and firm 
nta3l ft > (i.*). llay i* .treng and li ght r bm 
scarce; cuoice $22 Fork is In k<*ou demand tun 
h regular at $18 10ft)825. I^atxl is loivrr; tirro© 
relined $0 .50; keg $lo. Bulk meat* are in in r 
demand but 0 % low»*r rate*: shoulders, packed 
7*)sc; long clear and cl nr rib *-ide* , *4$<\ Bacon 
U m fair demand; shoulders «c; long clear aud 
clear rib slda* lu' jftlu^*. Hams, choice sugar- 
cured canvased t ndv at 1 tft t >Hc U'lue^y is 
flrm; NVestern rectified $1 05ft 1 20. Coffee steady 
w ith a good uttinajul: Kio cargoes, common to 
prime liftlri^c. Sugar is «iu|i uud uncuanged; 
comnmn 10 g<>i.Hi common }H**c : fair to fully 
foil prime to choice 5^^5140; yellow 

clatirtcd dfift89$c; whit© clarified «r; granulated 
7^c. I* quiet; cdtitn/ugal I7ft3uc; 

common 20ft22c; fair 2 >ft2«c; prime to cuoic© 
3 .ftriec. liic« in qui t but firmer; Louiri.um or¬ 
dinary to prime ,44« qofcfe Bran ia quiet and 
easier at $1 10. Cotton seed oil I* quiet but 
steady; prim© crude 36ft 38c: summer yellow 43 
./ 446 c. Sight exchange on Nt*w York $2 \t $1,. 
000 premium. Steriiog excuouge burnt era' bills 
487^. 

Milwaukee. 

Mn-WACitxr. March 8 ,^.Flour is in fair demand. 
Wheat is strong; No 2 Milwaukee 03c; scilt-r 
March 01c; seller April 02c; seller May »■♦ - o; s*-)ler 
June 08^c. corn I* firmer; No 2 o .fto.lUe. 
Oats are firm: No 2 31 ^4 ' 32c. Ryo Is steady: 
No l 6 U'-; No 2 A7Uc. Barlry is higher; .No 2 
snii g 6 lft 6 ll 4 c; No3 extra suritu 57c. Pro 
visions are firm Mess pork $17 80 cash and 
seller March: $17 05 seller May. Lard, primo 
Hteuiu $ * 4 > c.i^h and Miller March; it# *0 ©oiler 
May. Hams. s*voet pickled ll-> 4 ftl 2 k|C. Live 
hogs ar^- 1 -v\er at $0 25A6 00. Butler is flrm 
and higher; choice creamery ;i0ft:i4c; fair to 
good 2oft 10c: best dairy 26ft 2*^. Uh-cse Is firm. 
citeddura 13ftl3V$e; flits 14ft 1 5e, Eggs steady; 
tre-h 22ft2 c. Receipts: NV heat 10.606 bushels: 
corn 20.UO0 bushels: o.\is 13,0b0 bum* Is. Ship- 
nienis: Wh©.»t 4.000 Imshcb; coru 11,000 0u«u- 
cL; oats 3,000 busbrU. 

< inrinnatl. 

CMnchtjcati. March 8 .— Flour Is quiet: family 
$4 0 . 5 ft 4 85. fancy $5 1 .><9.5 40. Wheat is in good 
demand ai d flrru; .No 2r. k d$l 05ft 1 07. Com 
Is active an. 1 flrm; No 3 mixed 50c. Oats are 
firm and higher: No 2 mixed 3844ft37c. Rye ts 
quiet; No 2 65ft66c. Barley is quiet but firm; 
extra No 3 fall ode. Pork is firmer, mean $17 1.5. 
Lurd Is firmer: prime steatu $U 20 ftU 23. Bulk 
meats ere nrm: shoulders 7c; snort rib sides 
Me BscooUtlrm; shoulder© 81 ?: short rib sides 
10 y£c; short clear lUV*e. Whisky is active and 
firm at $1 13. Butter is firm and unchanged, 


extra Norihivesrem creamery 41c; choice dairy 
25c. Linseed oil U In lair demand at 55c. 
IfullanupolU. 

rxouxxroLia. March 8 .—Wheat Is steady: No 3 
red winter il 62. (.'ora is firmer; uuxea 481 * 0 . 
Oats arc w eaker; mixed 34c. 

< uiion .Markets. 

Nrw Yortx. March 8 .—’Jotton, market quiet; 
middling upl »nd KJ’^c; middling Orleans DJ^c; 
futures are dull; seller March 10 . 84 c; seller 
April 10.84c: seller May 11.02c; srller Jure 
11.14c; seller July 1125c; celler August 11.35c; 
seller September 11.00c; »e)ler October IO.C 80 ; 
srller November 10.37c; sellnr December 10.58c. 

1 uture deliveries continue to slowly decline: tha 
market cloved dull, with leading raonliu 2 - 100 c 
lower than yc-terday. 

Nr.wOnuuxa. >:nrch 8 —Cotton Is quiet and 
tmoMttiigwl: middling 10 7-lbc: low unddliMr 
10 Mi-': g<»od ordinary If 0 - 10 e; net receipt* 2 ,uov 
b.'il*-*; 3,800 batra. ex|>orta to Great Briialu 

4,100 b-l.-fe, H«iics 4.000 holes; clock 322,745 
boles. 

Galveston, March 8 -Cotton it easy and an. 
changed: middUnr 16*6 •; lo v middling 10 3*ldc: 
good ordinary 8 1 l-luc; net receipts>25 balen; 
exports 10 orent Briuiiu 7.000 bale«; cxpOilM 
cooiuulie* 13 bales; salt) to oslcs; stock 28,150 
bales. 

Mxjcerris, March 8.-Cotton Is steady; mid. 
dilng loH’-; receipts i.u8U boles; sfiipaVnu2.- 
5U0 link's; *tocL tk> 030 bales; ©aIra 1.050 bales, 

St. Lnris, March 8.-Cotton U steady; mid¬ 
dling 104*c; H»ii©A 30U bales; receipt* 1.50 ) bates; 

HiiiDQiciiL.-bales; stock 31,800 bain©. 

Cincinnati. March H -Cotton steady and uu- 
changed; middiiug 10 > 40 . 

OII Markets. 

Prr T snpnoi!, March 8 .—Petroleum was more 
active anri irregular: th© msrxat opened at 
$ 100 ^. advanced to $ 101 ^, bro © and clos.*d 
ut$l uiV4; trading good The afternoon session 
wa- firiin r l tilled I k i(m line certlflcatcii opened 
ot $1 6 \and utlvanc d to :1 • 2 . but Filer de¬ 
clined to 01 Fi and elated ai 81 01 * 4 , with 
1 radmg: active, 

Oir. tiTr. March 8-Ur Bed Pipe line certifl- 
cnirs open© i at SI bUVj, higher price $1 U2»4. 
lowesti 1 QjU and closrd at *1 Ul 7 4: sales 3.853?- 
WOLarr l .clearance* yesterday 0.31 \0Uu b^r- 
reU; runs 58.646 norrel©: shipments 4P.436 bar- 
charters 34,683 barreia Exchange stock, 

10. ) bid, HjO Asked. 

Baviironn, March 8.—Th* market for crud© oil 
w etranger; tutd runs Friday 71.015 barrels; 

total Niiipmi nta 57,305 barreis; cnarters 34.683 
barrels; clearance* II,646,0JO barrels. United 
l‘jp«-Jln«* cm tilkatv© open ft iU $1 00 ^ and HomhI 
at ail 01 higheat prirN* jjl 02. lowest $J O0>i. 

• urriLsxD, MaronB. - 1 . tlis nifidt 

Itquioc. stauilaiR wliite 110 dttg. t««t 8tqc. 

1 • la:: M#ro.v, March 8.—dpinu of luriteaUa© 
fiimathJc. 

Dry Goods Market. 

SmrYnxr.. March 8.-A rain storm kept tho 
market qtuvt Iu uli de{>artmeiiu. 

Pureign FlinmcUi ©a J * omniercisl. 

I.oxtJt/N, March 8. 6 p. Railroad Bonds 
. r . uiral ilh-L; 

Erie2^! t ; Kwui4s>ff26)$, 
rAWbi. March 8.—Rentes 70f 50c, 

AarrwcitH, March 8 — Petroleum iOtjm. 
Uvr.nvoot* March 8 . 5 p. h. -Cotton m In fair 
«Jr uin ' 1 ;r 1 n r *0 » unchanged; middling upl md 
1 0 1*1 fu* t'rlr-a 60 . .aien h,U 0 vi Ij.vl^; 

speculum ,! and c..port 10,000 uulh : meriuan 
6.8 J 0 ba lea. Butter. Unilod 8ta:©^ good 82 a. 

Livekpool, March 8. 3:.ri0 p. it.—pork, prim© 
rows Lualcrn dull at 8 jh; Wcstcru 70s. 

i.lt j; STOCK MAJiK 17TS. 

Cincinnati Live *i,.cU Market. 

[Corrected by Triton Embry C’o., U\r stock 
and 'HHHiu.iuH Brokers. Carted Uni ' 

.‘L/c 1 i" », C.ncinnair, U.; L'OVUWton >,lock- 

lantf. Cotnngtan, Ky ] 

< ixcix;, 1 . March 8 . -1 ‘attu;-R eceiptsfoi (be 
Ui ftt, 2,311; alilnments. ;fthj Mommy tho 
m 0 ket »v »; active and Him on all grade, and 
hoi« .irra bq'gta 4 good supply, which ha* ..ad a 
tendency lo make a *Jow m .rket (luting m« pp. 
111 tin ier o in® week. But llttlo doing in ship- 
plu^ c.i lie. wiill tht? demand continue* court for 
stockers and feeder* NV# quoin tb© following 
prices: 

Cat n.n—ShJprb rs good to extra... $fl 00$>.a 50 
Kill ppera, fair logo© I .... .5 753, d t*o 

Buienci . gooi to evtra.. 5 00 5 E5 

Bnuhers, good to choice.5 00&5 50 

Butch-rw, fair to goud . ■ 

liiitchcr*. coiumciu to talr.. 

Bmc u-r*. r mgh* and licaJawiUfs. 

Oxen, gt'od (o extra. 

Oxem. common to fair. 

Heifers, good tv extra. 

Cows. ,:ooJ 10 extra . 5 00^5 36 

1 O' .. fu r to g. «*d .. ..4 2.’kJV,,v i,0 

(.’u \ s corantoii to fqir .. 3 25ft4 23 

) .ull:u euo « 10 extra D iteher _ 4 75 ,; 5 23 

Hull*, good tfi chole© bologua...... 4 tH)ft4 73 

Bull*, (ai l *<o l fo^lt-rN. 3 23ft4 00 

H<‘ttvy stacker» ©tiu feeders.. 4 15 ,',5 50 

Lijrli -tucitcrs ami feeders... .. 3 25ft 4 25 

II*. -Ure 0 a for tin* pint nrli, 7,053; 
fdrtp.mrittt. ’*.145. As the riiuript© huvo b"eii 

11. I /or ilia ret two or thn*r d»*v« ,iiid 
not' nough to supuly the <li?mai>d, the market 
ha' !>••*• r. flrm. ! nt very few g. od nogs offi r- d 
to ij\»t ih© ntiength of Hie mark'd. Wo quote: 

U 00 fi—Select butchers aud heavy 

©hipping. $7 00ft7 50 

Fair logotwi p'i* k**ra . . .. 6 30*^7 fid 

FAir lo good lu-hts. 171) to KH) lire. 0 4fiftd s,3 

1 a 10 rood, less weight. 6 10ft6 35 

Common. 3 4Uft(t U0 

Culls.. 4 iKJft.5 25 

fir r .*.vb LA*as—Recelptfl for th© past w>-ek. 
1,048 ahipm uu 160. i’l - receipts for t?.r pnsl 
t.» o .'ay-- '..tv iM'i'ij very Jigut, aud thr uiaruet is 
steady .it quotations: 

6u#xr—Gof-1 to choice.,. 

home extra*.. 

Fair to goinl. 

Common to fAir. 

UUlla. ... 

LmiMvtti*. 


4 iSuuo 00 
8 25 

2 25 ft. 1 «*0 
4 50 ft *» 50 

3 U0 .>,4 <» 


?1 50ft5 23 
5 50ft5 75 
4 (.0ft4 50 
3 5*)f|i* U0 
2 obftlJ 30 


quiet but steady: reflneu 
Receipts: Flour 3.O0U irarrel!*; wfi. at 
6,000 bushels: corn 11,000 bushels; oat* lu.uuo 



[Rrporf d by T'l/mn, Embry <£ Co., Eire Stock 
CntHlU'SSfin Mr. chan ftl. 1 

Bocnnos 8r xre-VAnns. ry©uisviu.K, Kr.. March 
8.—CATTLK— Rrccipls lUht and inarKvC Mtixdy. 

At the close of tub week a >out ©veryudng Is sold, 
and prosp rets husk favorable for next \se« k i fie 
trade luta rukd firm ull the week, and sales were 
generally satisfactory to th© scilrr. 

Hoos—Rccrlpts, 1.280. uud .-riilpments 2fifl tn 
tho lost 24 hours, and during tin* week reoeipta 
foot up 0.410, And shlptuents 4.053 The martreC 
piled steady during tbe week, and about all wil¬ 
ing on arrual nt »ntl«fuctory prices to .lie seller. 
Prospects favorable for next week. 

Mi. r.p and I.ambs—G ood © .eep firm, while com* 
mnu are dull, No change in prices Notbiug 
doing. 

QUOTATIONS. 

Cattlx—'-' ood to t-xtnishipping.... $5 1 

Ltgnt snipping . * 

Oxen. g-*ori to extra . . 

Oxen, c-idJiuiou ana rough . 

Bulii*. c<io I... 

Light stockers. 

Feeder* . 

Butcners, best. 

Butchers, medium to good. 

Buicuere. common 10 medium .. 

’Abd* tough si.-t-rs, poor cows and 

scalawag. ... 2 00(3,3 25 

Horn*—Choice packing and butchers. 6 »$' ftrt 73 

1 air to good packlug . 6 4» ftO 00 

U.Mit medium butchers. ... 6 loftd 35 

Shoals nnd r mgh hogs..... 3 23ft0 00 

Surci* and Lamu«—F air to good ship¬ 
ping ... . 4 50*^5 00 

Common to medium. 3 5uft4 25 

UOV1SMENT DURING THE LAST TNVCXTV-FOUtt 
HOURS. 

Rec’ts. Shixr'ts. 

Cattle. 33 

Hog*. 1.280 260 

Horara and mules. 40 40 

Total.1.308 313 

Chicago. 

CntCAOo, March 8 —Hoos-Th© Drorcrs* Jour¬ 
nal report*: Receipts 5.000 h»*ad; shipments 
6,500 Head: market steady: rough packing $6 25 
ftP 80; p urklnc and sluppiuK $0 8&ft7 $0; light 
$( 6 85; skips $4ftfl. 

CArruc -Rtrccipts 1.700 head; shipments 3.100 
head; m 'r »-i unchanged: exports 30ft7: good 
to choh e shipping steer* $5 fluftfl afO; common 
to medium jj.’> |5ft5 76. 

biitj-r and Lamm—R eceipts 700 bead; ship¬ 
ments 2.3 <0 be »d: market active aud steady; in- 
fit lor to (air ^2 0 . 1&4 P cwt; medium to qood 
$4fto; choice to extra $6ft6. 

s*i, Louis, 

St Locts, Mnrch 8 —Cattlx—R eceipts 150 
head: s ipinents 1.200 fiend , there is no supply 
on hand and consequentlv there was nothing 
done outside o( u a.null retail trad©. Tbe pr.*©- 
petts fur uext week are regarded as very prom¬ 
ising 

MiEc:* and Lambs—R eceipts 250 brad; shlp- 
me it' 3.800 head. \ery scaroe, aud only a small 
retail business don© 

Hoos— Mar quiet: light *0 23^6 05: pock- 
ing $0.*J5ft6 80; ueavy $6 £K)(a7 io; receipt* 1,» 
OO0 head; shipments l.HuU head. 

Kansas City. 

Kansas Cmr. March 8.—The Live Sto-k InlN 
cat or reports: Cattlx—R eceipts 585 head; mar¬ 
ket firm. acUve and a shade higher; iretre,- steer* 
of i.0.53 to 1.432 P'i* sold at $3 1.V&U Jo; Stockers 
and feeders $4 70ft5 10: oows $-3 U0ft4 30. 

Q 00 s—Receipts 1.000 head; market steady; lot* 
of is * to 288 iU sold at §6 40ft6 75, mainly as 

$«i 40ft« 60. 4 

SH£ 2 F and Lamw*—R eceipts 570 head; market 
steady; uuuvcs of 70 to Uu lbs bold at $3 37Vift 
4 3 J. 

('inrinnatl. 

r.ivNciv^ATt, M irch 8. — Hoos— Are active sod 
flrm; common a n't licht $5 .’>0ft6 00; rMCkm* 
anri bmc era $6 5uft7 5u, receipts 8.'3 head; 
shipments 3 0 head. 


MANHOOD RESTORED. 

A victim fri enrlr imjirndenoe. causing nervous debit- 
Ify. pretnutaro deegv, etc., having tried in vain even 
i no'vtt rrmerty. has discovered a Minpla means tri ■<#!(. 
cure.tihich ho will send FREE to his t«i1ftv*-*ml!.-r*ra. 
Address J. 1L RIIE VLb, 4J CbaUnuu 8u, N«w York. 
Jy u .now uo^rrawiy _ _ 

ATP 1)17/11 TC IRuilosloas checked from first 
iiLAU/UO ’hour ot use, uy moch.iitcd 
T1FRI11 I’Y means. fcxumojv©ly u-eJi.ilu- 
VLtUiui 1 1, nat, c asylums and Hu»piUh, 
yrnn .p A t. oy u. 8. Government, now 
[oiierei ta auiterera outnids. 
1,200 cures in "tie month, Recommended oy 
leading medical rum and Journals. No cure, no 

E ay. Blue book with opinions free. Addres©, 

. is. Drip, ovary ^chartered imder Slate trews), 
et. Louts, Mo. jyUdJflu^’cdU'riJOJtwo'J 




































































































6 


CITY FEATURES. 


Far better thaw «ulnt«* Pr. Wlwteramltb** 

Ton ir Syrup or Chill Cut 1 *. Meral y break!ac tne 
c ) ill i& not suiLcirnt—tn© cause inunt lie rrraowd 
TYlnter»m»tto>* Chill luio uevor *+u*. bolh OJT -**1 

druggist*. _ _ _ 

The Chicago and Northern AdvertUemeniB 
published to-day an* of flr»l-clasa Interest. every 
one.___ 

►outturn Murrlmnli and liruffbta.—Wo call 
the especial attention of the merchants anti 
drupe i»te now in our city to the advertisement of 
Pr. WUiteramlUrs valuable fondly medlcitt»«. 
They are *erv popular wherever sold, generally 
superseding all preparation* they come in com* 
*titioii with. They are prepared with great 
care and skill by an eminent chemist of lone ex* 
perienee. For *sil«hy all of our wholesale drug* 

gists, and are recc-nmendol and prescribed i.jr 
our leading physicians. 

C ait r i c r * J o u null. 

MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 10. *84. 


ADVERTISING RATES. 


PAILY EDITION. Per tin*. 

E rst, fifth and eight U page*.$0 

side pages rpuhiishars’ option). **> 

Special Notices, nonpareil. jo 

Cur Fearures, nonpareil . wu 

Reading matter. uonunrell. 

Reading matter, minion .. «® 

For Sab *. Kents, Wants. Boarding, Steam- 
boats. Marriages, Deaths, Religious and 

Society Notices . 

SUNDAY EDITION. Per lint. 

First png© .$0 

Special Notices. 30 

Read lug matter, nonpareil. /*» 

Reading manor, minion.• . *• 

For .Sales, Renta, Wants. Boariing. Steam- 
boats. Marriages, Deaths, Religious and 

Society Notices. 15 

W EEKLY EDITION. Per hue 

Ordinary advertisements..SO 60 

Pu3in»*« Notices.... jo 

Read) .g matter, nonpareil. 1 UU 

Reading mat r. iiunlon ... . 1 

Solid Agate the Pasts of Measurement 
Severn Words lo a Line. Fourteen Lines to 
An Inch. 

|^Th© following discounts will bo made on 
pdividutil ciuitracts: 

On contract* from $lf>0 to $300 ... R per coot 
On contracts from 30ii to .'»00.. .10 per cent 
On contracts* from 1,000 . la per cent 

On contracts from 1,000 to 1,500—20 per ceut 
On contract* from 1,500 to 11,000 ...‘in per genfi 
On contracts from i.\uo0 upward— HO per cent 


RATES OF SUBS CRIPTIO N. 

TO MAIL SUBSCRIBERS. 

( Pottage j/repaid by the Publishers.) 
Daily. Sunday* Omitted. 

One Tear ... ...$14 00 J One Year . 00 

Six Month*... 9 . . 7 O'M Six Month* . 0 oO 

Three Month* _ 3 60 \ Three Month *— 3 00 

DELIVER Ll-' B T CARRIER. 

Per week. Sundays included . SO cents 

Per tree);, Sunday* omitted . US cent* 

Weekly pajier one year $1 60; fix montha 76 
mnis. three month* 60 cent s. 

roruiLK-Joi itNsi. BitAirn offices. 

Tkr CotTMISK-Jatm SAU hits eatnhtuhed Branch 
Office* for Correspondence and Vie re • ttpt of 
Oum lMt-nirfi'i and snhen iption*. and icnrrt 
fits of the paper may uiuuy toe Jouna. a* jo* 

totes: 

Xlw York — Room *3 nude*. Tribune Build - 
F. T. McFatldni. Manager. 

ClNCiXXATt—JYorf hea*t comer Fourth and Race 
tie.. Commercial iimldthj. 6. J. McJ'uUOen, 

Manager. 

WasHiNorn*?. t>. C\—jV©. RftR Fourteenth «f 
oypos.le EOJntt House ,, O, O. Steatry, Manager. 

CniCAon. Ill-—C fttb Room .% Grand Pacific 
Hotel. Edgar L. It oki man. Manager. 


ir^" 


TTTF. rOXTBIER-JOtTRNALj LOUISVILLE, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1884. 


RELIGIOl!" W0KSHIP. 


The Sunday Sermons of Dr*. Witherspoon, Manley, 
Morrison and Brondtu Listened to by 
Large Congregations. 


GENERAL CHURCH NEW8. 


A STEADY INCREASE!—2.506. 

The Wkkklv Coumbk Journal from 
week to week makes a sternly gnin in the way 
of new fcubscrihers. The tables show where 
the increase in its lista for the week has come 

from: 

New tintwrritier* fur week ending fle¬ 
er nilw-r w, |wh:I 1.002 

New Ibcra fur werk ending Dr- 

mu her 1.1 . .. . 1.610 

New i«h»rrilirr« for werk ending De¬ 
cent ber 22. 1,502 

New luliornbm fur week ending !»••- 
ecmlier 20. 2.009 

Total for four weeks In December 0.1.3 
New utilizer 1 brrs fur week ending Jsuu- 

arv 5 . 3.571 

New subscribers for torch ending Janu¬ 
ary 12 1 , 116 

New aulurubrn for week ending Janu¬ 
ary 10 3,14*1 

New Mtilwerihera for week ending Janu¬ 
ary 2tf . 3.753 

Total tor four week* In January.. 12,WOO 
Grand total for right weeks In Decent- 

berand January . 18,923 

New ►ubvrrltuTv lor week ending Feb- 

ruary 2 . 3,140 

New aiiliarrtbers for week ending Feb. 

ronry O . 3,4*52 

New aubarribrra lor week ending Feb. 

roar* 16 2,701 

New -olwrlbera fur week ending Feb¬ 
ruary 23 2.755 


Total for foor werk* Its February. 

Grund total for twelve week* com¬ 
mencing December I and ending 


12.31 1 


February 23..... 31,237 

New Nubarribrra lor weeklng ending 

March! .. 2.529 

Kentucky comes grandly to the front in 
the way of new subscribers seut to the 
Weekly Courier*Journal during the past 
week. The week before she numbered third 
in the race, being led by Texas and Missis¬ 
sippi, but lost week's accessions from Ken¬ 
tucky woro nearly as many in number as from 
oil the rest of the States and Territories to¬ 
gether. The table below will sbuw the num¬ 
ber of new subscribers received from thirty 
States and Territories. 

KEW SUBSCRIBER* RKUEIVED FOR THE LOUIS¬ 
VILLE WEEKLY COURIER-JOURNAL FOR 1 liE 

WtXX iMMMi march 8, 1884. 

Kentucky . 

lttsM'iA.ppi. 

Alabama. 

Arkan*a3». 

Louisiana. .... 

Virginia. 

Illinois. 

Iowa. 

California- 

Florida. 

Nevada. 

Montana. 

IV i»COUMU . 

Ni bia-l.a .. .... 

Washington Ter 
New Mexico. 


Dr. Witherspoon, of the First Presbyterian 
church, preached at the Second Presbyterian 
church. Second and Broadway, at 11 o'clock 
and at night. His sermon at 11 o'clock was 
from the text: *'He that spared not bis own 
sou, but delivered him up (or us all, how 
shall he not with him also freely give us all 
things 1” He said: 

"There is an ignoble element in our nature 
which fends to render that which is familiar 
more or less commonplace. There are coun¬ 
tries in the North of Europe w here the sun 
does not riso for six months of the year, and 
on the morning of bis annual reappearance 
we nre told that the people climb at early 
dawn to the summits of the tall cliffs that 
overlook the cold Northern sea, and there 
amidst ice and ^now await the coming of the 
king of day; and when at length his warm 
beams illumine the bori/.oti ami bat be the peaks 
around them in crimson, they lift up 
a psalm of thanksgiving to God that 
resounds through nil the glens and 
fiord> of their wintry home. But with us, 
where the sun ri*e* every twenty-four hours, 
the ©vent i» so commonplace that we scarce¬ 
ly give it a moment's thought. And so 
there nre truths, the most wonderful that 
can be conceived, and yet so familiar to our 
ears that they make no impression unon us. 
One of these is contain ed in the former part 
of the text: *God spared not His own son, 
but delivered Him up for us all.* We have 
been familiar with it from childhood, have 
heard it a thousand times; it b one of the 
common places of theology. But suppose a 
cultivated heathen, a man of rufined sensi¬ 
bility and genorous emotion, without that 
prejudice against the Gospel which seems to 
be characteristic of nil cultivated heathen, 
to bear for the first time this great truth of 
the God of heaven giving his eternal Soil to 
dio for the thus of the %*orld, what an Im¬ 
pression it must make on him! 

"This is the truth which the Apostle here 
states, for the sake* of emphasis, both posi¬ 
tively and negatively. God spared not bis 
own son: He delivered him up for ns all. 
Let us dwell upon the negative aspect first. 
God spared not His own son. What reason 
why He should spare him! He was His son, 
nnd all the fat bur's heart cried spare him. 
And then such a son! Every element that 
could endear. And then His only son! 
Heaven was emptied: the royal palace was 
desolated; he who made all its light and joy 
w as no more. Think to what ho was deliv¬ 
ered up! Consider the ignominy, the shame, 
the suffering, the accursed death. How 
could he thus deliver him up! 1 kuow there 
is a current metaphysical vie^ of the God¬ 
head, which includes intelligence and will, 
but excludes that wealth of emotion which 
makes tho beauty of human character. But 
acainst all such conception 1 place the mani¬ 
fold declarations of sacred scripture and tho 
(net that man's nature is made in the image 
of Goil, ami I contend that the giving of 
Christ U» death involved a personal sacrifice 
akui to that inn lo by an earthly parent, in 
giving up a child to the grave. A sacrifice, 
too, commensurate in ite intensity ami 
power with the inhruntty of the nature Unit 
is subjected to it. Take all this into con¬ 
sideration, and what an empbu&is iu the 
words of the text. 

"But let us pass from tho great fact 
stated, to the apostle's infer*-ure from it: 
‘How shall he not with him also freely give 
us nil things?' The argument is mauirold. 

"First—Since tho gift already bestowed is 
inconceivably the most costly that 
could b« demanded, the giver 
will not withhold lea* costly ones that 
may be required to secure the end couteiu- 
plated m liestowing thu lirM. 

"Seco.id—This hist gift is t he u*t and meas¬ 
ure of n love so boundlrai that no harrier of 
unworthiness or ditUcultv can arrest, iu 
course' it ha* scaled the mountain, and will 
not t>* drterred by the molehill. 

"Third—Tue fir*t gift really indudvsall the 
rest. As the stream contains only wbnt was 
in the fountain bead, so all spiritual bluing 
is nn outflow of Christ. He bns 'made unto 
us wisdom, rightl ousncss, sanctification and 
redemption.' The spirit stands, so to speak, 
by the fountain, and parts its waters into 
different streams; but the old hymn ex¬ 
presses the delightful truth: 

Thou, O, Christ, art all I want; 

All in all in Thee 1 hud. 

"Here Is security for those who would 
enter upon a religious life. Ho who has 
done so much for your salvation will hold 
you up and help you to the end. Hero is 
comfort, too, for those in anxiety iu refer¬ 
ence to temfioral want. *No good tiling will 
lie withhold from them that walk upright¬ 
ly.' Be of good cheer; all things are yours, 
whether life or death, or things present or 
thing* to come, all are yours, and ye are 
Christ’s and Christ is God’s." 


.1,015 

Texas . 

. ..2S5 

.. :irui 

Teitce>-*e© . 

.. .227 

.. 232 

North CnrotiDii 

.... 53 

...120 

MUtioiiri . 

... 30 

... 51 

Georgia.. 

.... 31 

... 3-i 

Indiana.. . 

.. . 10 

... 17 

Kantuu. . 

15 

, .. lo 

South Carolina 

... 10 

... 11 

1 1 ,dun Territory 

.. 8 

... W 

New York . 

.... 5 

... II 

Michigan . . 

.... 4 

... o 

Ohio . 

.... -ft 

... 4 

New Jerocy .. . 

.... 1 

1 

Oregon . 

.... 1 

! i 

Total . 

2.5«ti 


A MG s/lO II 


A Talk With Manager Bnriutrv About Hu 
Next Veninrs m n Miowtitan 
Mr. John Mucaulcy returned from New 
York yesterday. Mr. Macaule}* has perfect¬ 
ed his armngem»*ntH with th* Kiralfys for 
the grand spectacular entertainment, and 
we shall have it for three we»k*, beginning 
May 18. It has only btvn seen once before 
in this country, at Nib'o’s lust fail; and they 
propose to hnvo it this time on a far greater 
scale. Tbre spectacular play diHefa horn the 
others iu that it baa a plot. It represent* 
tho march of civilisation down through tho 
age? The Exposition building hasheeu en¬ 
gaged by Mr. Macuuley, and a special stage 
boa beeu erected. There w;l! bo a seating 
capacdv of at least I5.U0U. The stage w ill lie 
the largest in America, and there will be 
40D people on it at anoe. The company 
brings with them a dynamo-electro ma<*bme 
aud will manufacture their own electric 
lights. Besides this thero will bo on the 
stage at least twenty calcium lights. The 
company will bring with them *even car¬ 
loads of teen rv. They have their own mu¬ 
sical director and a number of line musi¬ 
cians. They wiU also engage the best local 
talent. Thu orchestra will number 40. The 
co-tamos will be of the m si splendid char 
acter. There are fi premiers and 100 cory¬ 
phee*. There will b« eight performances a 
week, six at night and two matinees; popu¬ 
lar prices will bo charged, so that ull who 
wish can at end. 

Special tnuus will be run, so that people 
from the neighboring cities will have a 
chatico to see tho greatest .spectacular show 
that was ever put on the boards in America. 

The Horaford Almanac and 1‘uoU Bonk 
nailed free on application to tho Itumford 

Cbanucal Works, Providence, K. L 


The Walnut-atrcrt Bnpllal Church. 

Dr. B. Manly preached in the morning to 
a large congregation from the text: "He 
said, 1 go sir. and weutnot." 

He said: "The parables of our Lord are 
remarkable for tho accuruto delineation of 
character. The first son said: 'I will not 
go,' but afterward went. This one promised 
to go, but went not. The text may be ap- 
phoiLto some in the church, but we speak 
only of those who make no profession of beiug 
Christians. Many of the latter say they 
iu tend to enter God’s service, but do not. 
They expect to be Christians, but it is in ti e 
future. You are warned of tho danger of 
dolay, and you say you intend to be a 
Christian, yet you do not repent. Good in¬ 
tentions, unfulfilled, are of no value. Then, 
good intentions are not always carried out. 
Wc ofUu forget our goal resoiuti mis. Time 
nnd agniu you have ruwlvod t<o repent, but 

{ rou are still unsaved. Many ot the 
ost intended to repent. Yon are sooth¬ 
ing y out self with the fame poison 

that lulled them to sleep and hastened thtiu 
to tho pit. intending to repent is au 
acknowledgment that you ought to repent. 
It Is also implied that you believe repentance 
is your ouly safety. InUmdiug to repent in 
the future, but not now, is equivalent to a 
purpose to continue ill sin n.*w, and. with 
your eyes open, you are violating God's la%v. 
Conscience and God unite in declaring that 
this is trie right time; yet you --ny ‘not 
now.’ It i* atrang- that we’should'do that 
for which wo know wo will be sorry; but 
how ^orange aud criminal that one should do 
what he know* to be wrong and nt the same 
time reeoiv© to bo t»orry for it! How do you 
expect to be brought to renentaurof By 
is you do, tiie opportuni- 
faciiities are dimtui-hmg. 
rejHtit. now? Wlmt induce- 
repentance do you desire 
you alreadv have? What 


We do not trust nature. You take your 
great coat with you on a fair morning. We 
fortify and watch against nature’s freak-. 
Nature has no sympathy. We Knru ber 
Jaws by running before their sharp 
^points. We find out her laws in our 
childhood by a painful nroews 
of burnings, and bumping*, and scalding*, 
and frostiugs. Nature drives her snows into 
the poor man’s hovel, and even bites the bare 
feet of the orphan, as ho stands begging at 
the door of Wealth. Nature is partial. She 
deuls more kindly with the rich than with 
the poor. Fifty thmiinnd. mostly poor, 
trusted to nature and lived too close to tho 
bauk of the Ohio. The Hoods drove them 
from home, nnd when at last, unablu to 
shake their houses from their foundations, 
the winds join with the waves nnd *w»*p 
them away, leaving them homeless and 
hopeless. Is this the nature that the mate¬ 
rialist is so true? Is this the nature so 
murh lauded? Is lhi* the nature that is to 
teach me of God? Am I to read bi« charac¬ 
ter through the-*e things? Then I «\m neither 
trust nor lov© such n God. Besides, nature 
mocks my deepest hunger. She feeds my 
body, but mocks the hunger of my soul. 
When I am hungry-for immortality—hun¬ 
gry for the society of those 1 have loved 
nnd lost—if I go to nature and lift up mr 
wailing inquiry, 'Shall they live again?* 
nature laugh* and mocks me with the echo, 
shall they live again? Then 1 must have 
something beyond nature to teach mo of 
God. 

*• Revelation lifts tnan from heathenism iuto 
a bigl) moraiity. The old Scriptures tell him 
bis duty. They put the 'shall' and ‘►hall 
not* to all thu points of hi* practical life. 
They chain bis passions, muzzle his appetites 
and bring him up to a well regulated moral 
life. Nature mak*** him a heathen. Reve- 
lion makes him a moralist. But still be is 
not brought iuto the life of God. There 
must bo new powers, new ideas, brought to 
raine him iuto the life of God. From whence 
are they to come? They nre to come out of 
the incarnation. The incarnation brought 
an entirely new circle of mural ideas.’ New, 
strange, powerful. Thu weakness of in¬ 
fancy; tho power of poverty; the 
might of helplessness. The babe is 
the sovereign in the borne. Its power 
is in its weakness. The begg.ir reaches your 
deeper aud better nature sooner than the 
millionaire. HU power is in his poverty. 
The helpless and fluttering bird bv the wny- 
sido commands th« attention of the passing 
Prince. Ita power is in its he\plea*ue«s. 
If Lbe«o things hav© such a moral power in 
their most insignificant forms, wunt must 
be their power when wo see CLxl, the Sover¬ 
eign of the Universe, in infancy, poverty 
and helplessness at the feet of humanity. 
There 1* a power in surrender. The child 
conquers wheu it tolls, broken In will, upon 
the parent's boerotn. The stroke Mint mur¬ 
der* au innocent fellow-man rebounds for¬ 
ever upon the heart of the murderer. Jesus 
uses these moral powers. He (ell, as a mur¬ 
dered babe, iut-. the arms of relentless mal¬ 
ice. HU dying bead full upon the bosom of 
malignant bumnuitv, but sent a wound to 
iU heart from which it has never recov¬ 
ered. The wounds of the murdered Christ 
have ever been rebounding upon the 
world’s great b* art, causing men to grow 
wretched and ask. 'What shall we do?' 
Those are powers that come, not from nature 
or revelation, but out of itae incarnation. 
Powers by which the world is to be recon¬ 
quered and brought back to God. 

"Heathenism 1 * man's response to nature. 
Morality is man’s response to revelation. 
Christianity is man's surrender to the incar¬ 
nation. His life cnanged, raised into the 
supernatural aud made onu with trie life of 
Christ. The incarnation has a history, a 
spirit, a genius and a power peculiar to it¬ 
self. Aud the fact is not only pant, but it is 
a present fact. Tho life of God in the 
church is the secret of its power. May we 
this great fact—the incarnntion—as never 
before. May w© drink into ita spirit and be 
tUied with iu life, until men can look upon 
us and say. 'Behold God manifest in the 
fiesh.’ Then shall the church have power.* 1 


proceeding 
titii and 
Why not 
merits to 
than those 


more con be >aid than ba* been *aul! Wbut 
more can l»e done' When do you intend to 
repent? If vou have put tho day off to a 
year hence, do \ou know that yon will live? 
You refuse whnt you have—the present— 
nnd protnlre God what y«>n have not—the 
future. He who puts <•(! im salvntiun to the 
uncertain future, commits a deed of daring. 
God ►ays: ‘Repent, <»r perish.’ 

"The p><sitiou of iuixMiding to repent, with 
a pu> pose of remaining in that position, pla< es 
one beyond the reach of God’s grace. Moke 
one earnest, hone-»L effort to save your soul." 

God Wav >laailrst In the Flesh. 

Dr. H. C. Morrison yesterday morning 
eloquently expounded the incarnation from 
the text: "God was manifest in tue flesh." 
Lie said: 

"The incarnation is supernatural. It can 
not he reached by laws of mechanics or 
principles of mathematics. For this reason 
many reject it. They sav it is unnatural, 
and hence untrue. Nature, they say, is true. 
Admit it. Then, wa a*k, from whence does 
nature come? Nature is from Got!—born out 
from tho supernatural. Then, if nature be 
bom of God, nnd yet be true, so mav the in¬ 
carnation, for it is bom cut from tho earn© 
supernatural. Nature is true, in tho sense of 
the invariable conformity to tho principles 
on which she rests: true as uu expression of 
Divine power, wisdom and ta.st©. But na¬ 
ture does not Uoch us to love and to trust. 


Thr llrondway Baptist 4'hurch. 

Dr. John A. Broodus had a largo audi¬ 
ence yesterday morning at Broadw ay Bap- 
list church. He said: 

"The text this morning is the Lord’s 
Praver os given in the sixth chapter of 
Matthew. In His great, svnnou on the 
Mount the Saviour points out the throe 
great duties of almsgiving, pi*ty aud 
prayer. He teaches that these are not to be 
done ‘to be seen of men.’ After this the 
Baviour, to show the importance of prayer, 
makes a digression to say something about 
prayer. ‘Use not vain re|>ctitioti os tjie 
heathen.' The priests of Baal with their 
long, loud prayers did this. Your heavenly 
Father knoweth what you need 
before you ask, and His is no dull, 
reluctant ear. Many suppose the 
Saviour gave hero a form of certain 
words to be used. This Is not so. for in Luke 
the prayer is civon with different wonts, 
though kubstantiallv the same prayer. This 
prayer was given not as a precise form of 
words, hut ns model. Home shrink from 
praying in public or in the family because 
they can not find anything fit to bo said. 
Noiie of us can ever find a better prayer to 
pray all our live* than that of th» Publican, 
•Lord be merciful to me a sinner.' There 
are many {Scri ptural pit rases well suited for 
pravers. Notice the simple, comprehensive 
beauty of the Lord'* prayer. Wo can not 
hope to equal it. Notice Die opening. Thy 
name. Thy will. Thy kingdom. The second 
portion is give us, us, us. Do we pray 
this way? Do we put our wants first 
or second? Ah, the tendoncy is to put man 
first. Even tho world says give us a gospel 
that comes up to man'* needs. That Is truo; 
but not the Bible way, which tmt God's 
glory first, for whatever promotes Ills glory 
b esses man most. That is tho beauty of re- 
ltgion. Having said so much generally, I 
can only touch on tho points in the prayer. 
Hajlow ed be Thy name. This is God Al¬ 
mighty’s world you are in. Ho keeps you 
alive. Stop when tempted to lightly use His 
name or iiis word. Dr. Johnson *ald a 
witty man ought to be above jesting about 
the Scriptures—It was too ea»v to do. Thy 
Kingdom come. That Kingdom began com¬ 
ing with Jesus, and is coming yet. Many 
lauds nre still in darkness. Even in our 
b autifui city multitudes do not acknowl¬ 
edge our King of Zion. Thy will bo done. 
Nothing lakes place in Heaven only as God 
wills it. Much goes on on enrth 
which !Ie has prohibited. When 
we prav for His Witt we must 
work for it. 'Give ns this dav our dully 
bread.' Some church fathers thought spirit¬ 
ual food was intended. Some modern writers 
say food i* a matter of law, not praver. 
True; but law prevails in the moral as well 
as the physical world. This is tho place for 
praver. *G»>d’s word is per vaded wiih the 
idea of our dependence on Him. and w© need 
to cornu to Him diilv, hourly, and at ©very 
heart beat. ‘Forgive u* our debt*.' Debts 
mean sins. We need to tie forgiven. Do 
you know the horrors of debt? My friends, 
you nre over head and ears in debt, and have 
not n penuy to pay. Praise Him, He is ever 
ready to forgive. But notice t.bo words tho 
Saviour added: ‘As we forgivo our debt¬ 
ors.’ Do wo ask God to pretend to forgive? 
How bard to forgive. There is a distinction 
in forgiviug. Firet. w© forgive and bear no 
malico ag’tlust the offender. That is what 
tho Saviour means by love your enemies. 
But you nre not r * take them back into posi¬ 
tions they have forfeited. 

"Bring us not into to notation, but deliver 
us from evil (or tb© evil one.t Ab, the dan¬ 
gers of temptation. 1 talked with a man 
recently many miles from her© who had bold 
a high position, was tempted and fell. He 
had trusted in bis own strength. It is no£ 
flattering to our pride, that we are not safe 
a single moment unless kept by God. Oh, 
when wo are in temptation God is faithful, 
who will not suffer us to lie temple l *bove 
that w© are able to bear. Rejoice in this. 

"My friends, do vou like to prav? Isitvour 
habit to pray? Begin this morning. Take 
thiii model prayer. Go boldly to the throne of 
grace. God b<dp us all to carryout tho 
teaching of His son.' * 


('onsre^atlunal Note*. 

Three churches bad baptizing yester¬ 
day. 

Fourteen revivals arc in progress in 

Louisviilo. 

Elder F. I> Srtglet Is going to Texas 
this spring. 

Ukv. R. Reynolds has resigned at Jef¬ 
fers >n rill©. 

Hmnuy Ward Blkc her will lecture 
here this mouth. 

Knox Presbyterian church has a candy- 
pulling March 11. 

Elder R. H. Neal is working up a 
Bible-reading hllioxico. 

Rly. Die T. T. Eatos will be home 
from Florida this week. 

Mb. Andrew Broadus, leader of Chest¬ 
nut-street Baptist choir, efficiently assisted 


in the singing yesterday at the Broadway 
Baptist church. 

You NO men’s prayer meeting at East 
Baptist church to-night. 

The Fifth and Waluut street Methodist 
revival continue* this week. 

Bishop T. U. Dudley will preach In 
Elizabethtown next Sunday. 

St. James Sunday-school gives an en¬ 
tertainment Tuesday’ evening. 

One person was baptized last night at 
Walnut-street Baptist church. 

The Fifth-street Colored Baptist revival 

goes on with increased interest. 

The Chautauqua Circle meet at the 
First Christian church to-night. 

Six members were received at the first 
Presbyterian church on yesterday. 

The Board of Managers of the Colored 
Orpnana* Home meet Tuesday night. 

The Hancock-streei Christian church 
began a protracted meeting hut night. 

The Green-street Baptist church held a 
large communion service yesterday after¬ 
noon. 

Rabbi Moses will lecture on the Book 
of Esther this evuning iu tho Broadway 
Temple. 

The colored Sunday-school Union held 
a short session at (Jurnn Chapel yesterday 
afternoon. 

Thk young ladies of Broadway Baptist 
church give a candy reception Friday from 
ii to 10 p. m. 

The Executive Committee of the Gen¬ 
eral Association of Colored Baptists meets 
Monday afternoon. 

Dk. Weaver delivered a pleasing chil¬ 
dren’s sermon to Broadway Sunday -school 
yesterday morning. 

Last week Asbury Chapel congregation 
surprised 1‘ostor Taylor with contributions 
of groceries, canned goods, etc. 

The only Congregational church in Ken¬ 
tucky is m Louisville, having bought the old 
Fail Baptist church. The members number 
sixty; all ore colored. 

Rev. Dr. Carey, of tlic Richmond 
(Va.) Institute, was in the city lost week ex¬ 
amining the Southern Baptist Theological 
beiuiimry, which be highly compliments. 

Christ church held over six hours of 
service yesterday. Prof. Thomas F. Gailor, 
of the University of tb© South, preached at 
the morning, afternoon and night services. 

The Ladies’ Aid Society of the First 
Presbyterian church will hold a special 
meeting on to-morrow (Tuesday) afternoon 
at 3 o'clock. All the members are earnestly 
requested to attend. 

The pulpit ot the First Prcsbvtcrlan 
church was filled by Rev. Dr. Pratt both 
morning and night. Ruv. Dr. Witherspoon, 
pastor of th© First church, occupied the pul¬ 
pit of the .Second Presbyterian cnurch at th© 
same hours. 

A pastors', Sunday-school teachers’nnd 
frieudb’ mass meeting will be held Thursday 
at 8 P. M., in the Fifth nnd Walnut-street 
Methodrit church, to arrange for the Inter¬ 
national Convention. Mr. Jacobs, of Chica¬ 
go, will address the meeting. 

The Louisville Literary and Scientific 
circle (colored) has organized with Wm. H. 
Perry, President; Win. J. Simmons. Secre¬ 
tary; J. M. Maxwell, Treasurer; 0. H. Par¬ 
rish, Librarian. Tue flr^t session will be 
Monday night at Quinn's chapel. 

Center - street colored Methodist 
church, having been repaired at a cost of 
$1,000, had a grand reopening yesterday. 
Tue programme, which was participated in 
by Revs. Miles, Douglas, Lane, Messick. 
Mosely, Tbomas. Johnston anil Bell, bad 
twenty-two features and required all day to 
be gone through with, beginning nt II 
o’clock a. m. Tiiere were three collections. 

Yesterday afternoon the German Bible 
ren ling in the Polytechnic building had a 
very large audience. Rev. Ed. L. Weaver 
made tho opening prayer. The greatest ner- 
mon—the sermon on the Mount—was read bv 
the audience. Prof. Haupt detailed the good 

E oints of the Bible as a guide from earth to 
oaven. Prof. Mueller told the German ori¬ 
gin of th© man in the moon. Gospel songs 
were aung. and it was unanimous) v voted to 
have another Bible readiug next Suuday. 

RII ARM ACY. 

Th© Governor’s Apptotal of the Dill Inror- 
pnrntinic the Woman's -H-lmol. 

The act incorporating the Woman's School 
of Pharmacy was signed by the Governor 
Saturday, and is now a law in full effect and 
force. By its provisions all graduates of the 
‘‘Louisville School of Pharmacy for Wo¬ 
men" are entitled to keep open shop or to act 
as aids or assistant* to persons keeping such 
shops or stores without registration or ap(Ui- 
calion to the State Board, thus ignoring all 
their claims to supervise the drug trade *0 
far a* the graduates and licentiates of this 
school are concerned. 

This is a foir and logical answer to tho 
board, who refused to register a lady who 
was nut only a graduate of the Michigan 
School of Pharmacy, but was also a grad¬ 
uate of one of the best literary colleges, and 
yet admitted to registration a gradunte of 
Baldwin University, a school thoroughly re¬ 
sponsible as a theological school, yet on© 
which has no chairs of pharmacy, materia 
mcdica nor chemistry, nor any of the 
branches taught in any school of pharmacy 
in this country. 

The report of th© Kentucky Board of 
Pharmacy mad© a few days since to the 
Kentucky Legislators, proposes a new defi¬ 
nition of "graduates in pharmacy." Tho 
definition proposed is that "graduates ahnll 
be those coming from institutions that re¬ 
quire an apprenticeship of at least three 
years a* one of the conditions of gradua¬ 
tion." Thi* new definition of a "gradoat© 
in pharmacy" is altogether different from 
that in the present existing pharmacy law 
of the 8t©te. The new definition is entirely 
in th© inrere-U of the institutions under the 
control of t »© drug-store miunMs of the 
country, r nd excludes graduates from many 
of the pharmacy school* connected w th »h”* 
largest and mo?t respectable institutions of 
the country. It excludes graduate* from 
Vanderbilt University, Michigan Universi¬ 
ty, Virginia University, Louisiaim Ui v*» 
ity. Me lien 1 College of Virginia, Iowa Wes¬ 
leyan University, in additiun to M m© of vue 
Pennsylvania and New York school*. 
Many of the excluded schools have 
graduates scattered throughout the Unit d 
States, who will be affccrid by 
this nUcriratnatinn. Tne School of Michi¬ 
gan University bun graduates in all the lead¬ 
ing lniMm**s-houses in the United States, and 
their service* are in great demand in other 
parts of the country os prescriptionists. The 
contributions ot it© graduates to th© phar¬ 
maceutical journals of Europe and America 
have refiecied credit upon the cause of edu¬ 
cation in the United States. 

The laws of the States of New York, New 
Jersey, Maine, Virginia, Pennsylvania, 
Kansas, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, 
Alabama, and many ether States of the 
Union make no such discriminations. 

The rulings of the Board of Pharmacy, 
under lb© present pharmacy law of 187B, 
have already practically excluded all grad- 
uat-s in pharmacy who ar#. not from institu¬ 
tions representing th dru g tore interests, 
and tb *y now p.opose to invest .11 -ir by-laws 
and ruling* with the authority of law.* 

A young lady of high qnaJifiraiions, from 
Eastern Kentucky, coming with a record 
Ire»m her school in every way creditable to 
the State, wa* lutely refused examination bv 
the board. It was then contended that the 
present law justified the exclusion, but th© 
ijoarJ seoui unwilling to rest under tb© old 
law as it stood, and now proooec to extend 
the uow order of things to the State at large. 
Tb© organization of the new b^ard under the 
proposed now law is a matter in which the 
State has a de**p interest, and it should be 
freed from all local interv-its and all tempta¬ 
tions to sway it in the interest of any partic¬ 
ular claw of institutions in the country. 
Merit hi the applicant and safety to the peo¬ 
ple should alone l>e made the loading 
features in any new law upon the subject of 

pharmacy._ 

111* John C. Calhuuo Monument. 

Th© following speaks well for Louisville’s 
enterprising monumental builders: Messrs. 
Jaine^S. Clark & Co. have received advice 
from Columbia, 3. C., that Gov. Hugh S. 
1 hompson has discarded all the many plans 
for the above monument from the Northern 
aud Eastern cities in favor of two handsome 
designs from Louisville bouses, of which 
Messrs. James 3. Clark & Co. are one of the 
successful, and the award, if not already 
made, wifi be dec* * ’ *oon in favor of 
Louisville. 


jhe i.ocisrir i t hotel. 

It Olebretra Ita flrjmmotion with na Enjoy. 

Aide ttaiiqu**! \ t alrrdav. 

An elegant dinner wa» given by the Louis¬ 
ville Hotel Company yesterday afternoon to 
the members of the daily press and other in¬ 
vited guests, it was most tastefully served 
in the newly and handsomely-fitted dining 
ball of the hotel, Messrs. Phil. Judge and E. 
C. Bobne doing the honors with genial hos¬ 
pitality. Indeed, the managers of the 
Louisville Hotel have special cause to foel 
genial, for the hotel has just beun completely 
refitted and renovated. From top to bottom 
—in halls, parlors, stairways and rooms— 
everything has been repainted aud re¬ 
papered; new carpet* have been put down, 
new chandeliers hung, and the famous old 
hostelry 1 * as bright aud cosy aud comely as 
the most fastidious could desire. 

The following attractive menu was appre¬ 
ciatively discussed yesterday afternoon: 

Pan roast oysters. 

Rhine nine. 

Bouillion. 

Mont© Yrinrt© sherry. 

Broiled Potomac shad, butter and parsley sauce. 

Potato a la Duke. 

Braised filet of beef, with truffle*. 

Asparagus. 

Sliced tomatoes Mavonuaise 

Veal sweet bread*, larded, wito mushrooms. 

Green |*aH. 

Spinach. 

Roast prairie grouse au jus. 

Lettuce. 

Champagne. 

Omelette soufiee. 

Ice*. Fruits, take*. 

Roquefort checsp. 

French coffee. Cigars. 


Knthuslaatlr Mretlns of the Emerald Branrh 
of (lie Irlab National Leacue. 

The meeting-hall of the Emerald Branch of 
the IrKh National league was filled to over¬ 
flowing last night with an enthusiastic crowd 
of ladies and gentlemen on the occasion of 
the monthly meeting of the branch. 

The mooting was opened at 8 o'clock by 
President Rodgers in a brief introductory 
speech, after which the regular business of 
the branch was proceeded with to its clo^e. 

The President introduced Hon. L. M. Mar¬ 
tin, of Cynthiana. Ky., State Senator, who 
delivered on address which was brief but 
full of sympathy for the people of Ireland in 
their struggle for self-government. 

The following programme was rendered: 
Duet . . ‘‘What Are the Wild Waves Saying?" 
Miss Lou Muoohan ami Miss Lizzie Brennan. 

Song."hweci Bessie th** Pride of Dundee.’* 

Mr. E. W. Woods. 

Song .. "Scenes That Are Brightest,’’ and a duet 
from Norma 
Miss Celia Cavanaugh. 

Duet—"In the Gloaming." end ‘Koeel and Pray 
B-side Your Mother s Grave " 

Messrs. Timmons ami Streeuv, of the Celestial 
Quartet. 

Song—"Mr Horn© Across tb© Sea," and "Under 
the Daisies.' * 

Mr. HenrvO'Hern. 

Song.. . . ‘The Beils of Shandon." 

Mi** Lou Monoban. 

Instrumental Solo . Miss Lou Mooohan 

Song—"When Blossom* Shall Cover l.'s,Darling" 
3ilsft Kiln While. 

Duet . ... "Wandering in th© May time." 

Mi*s Lou Monoliari and Ml** Ella White. 

Song. "The Day 1 Played Base ball." 

Mr. P. Ualfsgher. 

Recitation. "1 b© Moneyless Man." 

Mr. D. C. McCarthy 

Song—[Original, sung bv Mr. A Nalty. th© 
author, who was encored with great applmi*.’, 
rendered a new and popular piece on the stan¬ 
dard time, which wa> a decided hit j 

Song."Sad is th© Heart." 

Ml-s M nm it* Toner. 

Song—"The Charming Young Widow I Met on 
the Train." 

Mr. Tho*. K. Hines. 

Th© meeting adjourned well pleased. 

When lips received a rosy flush. 

And teeth become a tiaxxllng white 
Beneath the efforts of trie bru-h. 

When SOZODONT is u*ed aright: 

The mouth become* sweet, pur© and warm. 
And tn© fresh bienfh sn odorous Charm. 


THE WEEKLY 

D 


'Il¬ 


ls ISSUED THIS MORNINO. 

It is chock-full of the news of the week, 
correspondence, talcs, miscellany, poetry, 
etc. f etc., and is the very paper of all oth¬ 
ers to send to friends abroad. 

Copies in wrappers ready for mailing 
can be had at our counting room. Price, 
five cents. 


ENG HAVING, ETC. 

ENGRAVING AND DESIGNING 

—ON ■ 

WOOD. 

Haring engaged two of th© finest D©dgn©r* 
and Engravers in thcccnntry. we are now pre¬ 
pared to do all kinds of Fuigraving 00 the ahurb 
.ckt notice at reason© bl© prices. 

COURIERJOURKAL - JOB PRINTING CO., 

Fourth Ave. and Green. 


MEDICAL: 


ARTHUR PETER & CO., 

WMwI. if«U, Lo .krill., (,. 


DR. RICE 


, Kl’ 


37 Court Place. LOUISVILLE 

A rt*\*r\y r*acsU4 *r>4 .<o* 1UU4 phytlcUB ud Hit 

wool * 01 . 1 * ifai, »» Ml |*r*rtlc. will 

CHi$*N$ £,T's&UAi V iH: 

Spermatorrhea and Impotepcy* 

m IS. rwMlt of la fwh. •«**! «<w» 

«ur.r *MM.or fithn auk., aM urm* *I Ui ««» 

lua.i’fdr u; N«r*.uiii'M,fWai!n.l EwimIw, (a'fhl «nl»- 

Et 4r..jmDln>n««» «f Moiftcnr, I jr© 

>V*1 IWm, Pl*rniw«« A*,r^»«>n ta £*c‘.t»**•«».I« s 

Caatola ?it U*m, 1— «,* 6*x al ©w* ©&.' - >» 

uavrEtf. l:rip|.j«-T or ■"■'•aptr*. art aeMy 

a™u y «i« 4 . STPHtLIS enn9 t nd, ‘ 

lirtly »r«<!lottad tro:u din GonOrillOS, 

GLEET, bmctrna. OftfUtl*. H.rrla, (•* ftepuxn), 

PUr, Ul ottar prl».v» sickly raraS. 

RitMlf ©r|4«atCb.t , | Kyikttfu *ho p*y .p»fUl aUratlr* 
V) ft rr-uliicl. • ot ftnil trehns lh.< »*»»•!• 

»1)t, ftr^tjirc rrMltfeiJ). InwWlRf thte fwt.rua 

rn ixanw-.it ir-uMii to my VVbu it it la««a**n*wt l. 

▼Miin. city (or Um*tJrml. leaStrlftr. out W Mnt pmstiljr 
•1.4 Mlrly tv tsail or rxpr~4 vwlui*. 

Cures Guaranteed in all Casos 

undertaken. 

C.a»uU«il«.i finally m hr lrtWr tiv* ar.rt InvlUkl. 
Cl>arf«« r*t*.n*bl* and cetu^ utiUmct ilrldiy <vtiflJ.iu.aL 

A PRIVATE COUNSELOR 

or *K> **atu> anf a4 r*«, *pvp!» inJm), tor thirty 
cun emu Should l* r«ad fey all. Ait lr*** a« ,V»*. 
Otto, hour* bom »A. M..to 4 P. W. 8 to 4P. S4. 


; WORPHSNE HABIT 

Pit II il KaXB, of th, D>0<ilaf«y 
I Inn mi. uow oStri <% R»mr4> wJj.reby 
.ly, Fort*.lira*- 


OPIUifi 


CHICAGO AND NORTHERN 

ADVERTISEMENTS. 

' Th* advnrtiapmnnt «f no limitation, firm or Interest, who©* reliability la not assured, has been or will t* 

rereiyi-d in th**e roluiuun. > 


DR. WINTERSMITH’S 

Tonic Syrup 

CHILL*CTJBE 

THE BEST. 

It Core* Every Form of Fevor nnd Ague, Dumb 
Chi 11a, Remittent and Intermit¬ 
tent Fever*. 

The Chill When Broken , Docs Not Retutn. 



.]].« (a.«ii« l , l ,n.k ni i,i i iiU 

* . »fe*. a >*M|.,r,fe f tw WL 

8t~leArrtc+,C*; r ‘ ( ,iA3t.l*<!a 



flna CVim .,1 tniib ,tLUgl 
•aWr *f, ^ \ mm* ■.,•!«,a.wU.. anl- 
e.-.H >^rar*«. l>rfrM tn mm. 

la ataavara ul ««*utv. 
Tfc, mrtt *fttaM..fT«*#f.1 ,a4 M*- 
*>kl inn (Uiar, Iu all nm- 
8t*»teAPnenCMc pt>ASi.UAa 


HXs'kTNtv 

INTHP. 10 R 

FURNISHING ROOMS 

fastral latl. Rail. Cfcteaf*. 

UpAnftta'fl Deovmnar: bru*~ 
ee*! f‘.mltvrvt Lmem Ceettttm l 

NOVELTiESt 
W# mall* «if InUfion, 

Iwenk and turnWh pfiraU r*» 
■tdreeva; ftnijey arfl*u 

for Maaran Mom* rtr-mni 
wiiU .Switfe**. 
iuui'ir* UivlW. M.utiwi C.-J. 
Cau . ow e* a C> »cmkw 
THE BEST 

BRICK 

‘‘'sTlJL.E 

Sierrx-iiliicv 

seisnfl 

MACHINES 

Had*, in nmaufactared fey 

J.W PEN FI ELD, 

tmUOlMJHBt. OHIO. 

’L’lSSt 


GRANITE 1R0NWABE 


GILES, BRO. & CO., 

TMf OLDEST 

WHOltSAU A UTAH 

JEY/ELERS 

IN CHICAGO, 

©•abiur'oa a.d SUU* Sta. 

Whol««al« AgraU 
ELrOfN WA1CHBS, 

A Oa.Stt©** MaK 
•v Oi*pl>u lllvurtM C*u- 
l<*n** I. dral-r. ot applx a- 
• Wm. Sauthrra MrtwpraOaM 
*»re hU I > latllaA. 

GRIFFITH & WEDGE 

IMUVILll. OHIO, 
Itaauiartu/*r»«f 

Porlatle 5 Stationary 

3TEAH ENGINES, 

or h«at ataUrlal „« aafe.. 

—©MO— 

CIRCULAR >A« MILLS 

for naaulUT aft* 

quality .f |.r^wi„,i IllaiUft, 

t*d CaialM* >«• .mi rnr.K 

M<>I Co f • iaa Jot a.au. 


A.G.SPALDiSG&BRDS. 

1QBMu *»«oo Tit.. Chicago.' 
Mlfa, rMUUtW a H'liUM 

SPORTING GOODS, 

BASF BALL B'JWJtS. AflCHfAY 
00003. rtSMIMQ TAClLt StATtS. 
CROQUET. BlOYCUS. BOATlhO. 
OfMVASlUM, THEATRICAL. AHO 

au sTotrriNS oaoos 

4m«i(mM. fe.fh (-I*. Wrtl. 

far no* Ofy ' Atumm,' Jonh 
(tiu im. mUmii .UluaUft- 
to4> Vmtira nicuta JwUii. 


4 .V 0 . h. Ji irtai 

Printing House 

r.♦*!»!».< JnimI iu*«.. Cfettftfa. 
r.t, .uu Miw-i.t mirui«w»r 
fea* lit. UipK A>antM*! ,r 

TROTTING 4 RUNNING CUTS 

Mtd BM*I IBftlUi MMfe ,f 

tlLUWINArfo POSTCRfl 
ferCh.aail Mi'ltar, 

pr*i uilluih. l .fe. Ut k*MI) * 
iaipoH hiffe ,r*,T ,f .urfeluaft- 

fcatawi LwuaJMiw. 


mdndim 

k ?Vr'»C1 Djtrliiij school. 

322 E FRANKLIN ST. 

RKtiWwiMl. V a 

8, T. BBACfl, Principal. 

Tb. Itlli iMfiat Tlmrv 

ilai. IS, ftnd rlo^i J-a. If. 
'H L'»^.lfilltrti .trl'i. Locaiiu* 
u.ataraMae lor b«aUfeiuJtm«. 
T.aefe* • tfelllfni and *f Iwj »!• 
p ru»iv. Tr.im 1 STtl) I »r 
»u* 0 . 'nrln<Viu| »*rrr>fchijf«»r^| 
«.«biax * 'I ii..dhal awaflaoM. 
WtH . fnr xtr.Ia,,. H>»IIm C j, 

CVwni. It' L Pt t 
W. A. W kivat. 

BOOTH, DIL15FY 

&C0. 

KUTTAWA. LYON CO.. KY- 

Mali ala-, lot—* ot 

WAQON, CARRIAGE 
and PLOUGH I 

WOOD 


THE8HURLY00. 

Watch l JevelrjCo. 

77 State St.. CHICAGO. 

Bat WaaktaaLa A Kand*li.fe. 
(In4unm fer N*a OflU, C4.1 

Ar» wfeol—»’• arid rtiall dral-ri 

ia DiiQoodi, Witch**, 
Jewelry, Clocks. Solid 
Hi Ivor and Pirated W*ro ot 
B**et Mak-ft. If yn« wlib 
ar.vtAlftf, ,-nd far Iiu -T*»»t« 
CtTUoli't a»4 I'rW lilt 
>*<•- 11 ,™. r ovaua-Juca**!.. 

OUR CUT-OFF ENGINE. 
a ruKi^SAVxa, 



for PirL-»t Mwiltaa ©.-J. 


*m*t 

SAW-MILL SET WORKS 

M4rt* TAYLOA CAN ft CO 
„ amOfrrtwr/, /V 



“L 0 ,\E STAR ’ t BIKT CO. 

m statist. Chicago. ' 

PALMER UOl -C. Mai* 

$S.50 BUYS SIX 
Of »U ArWH VnUomintA 

SHIRTS! 

fk awl »-r »»„• 


For S ale by all Houee T ,««!«* 

AMERICAN SAW CO.. 

TRENTON. N.J. 

Maoofarturm of 

QXHOXJX-AR 

HAWN 

WIrh tb# <>:.brat«4 

BROOKE BIT 

AVO- 

TRENTON TOOTH. 

Tb. Brr aad TUOTI! Ill lato 
taia# *or ArUaii-1 are tat«rrfeaa(.- 
«bU Caa fe. Swaf-4 ar 0^1- 
WU1 tlauii .wan. or a*T ®*bet 
h ad. IHo»tral#4Camtoyaa ream . 

BARNES* 

Patent /W AStfnm Pmrer 
MACHI5 Kit Y. 

Mitflt* far Ac»wal ( 
\Vu-».a.*s DiMirvrM. ‘ 
forW.nNcr M.tftJ t 
Na».,*kTfll *■*»». F 
m, MrrUwn 
Traut*##., ill , 

Macklar* oa 
tna) lftlnirrd. 
n**rrlpti'r* 
ratals-*# and 

rrvaUitvaec 

W. r. A JOUA BA 

Mo. 2219 Bain Sfo BocAfoed, (V. 



L. ANDKbWb it 80S8, 

W'tUUaMfCBT. Pw»*. 
Manf>* «f 

Fstral r S#w Prcmi 1 Toafir 

SAWS! 

Of rwry ii»» ^iptfoa. AUo 

THE " ACME" 

SAW QUMMlft AbO SHARFlNUL 
H-t» E*o#ry Manilla* I two. 
A 1*0 rat. 9loft#1- Plalod Doord 
tint.. IUaiirat#«l Catalerooe 
FHKIL MroUoo rnrt»»J’t 


r. 4. I. SLAM OT, 

W.SW!5* 


II He. domel 


rhM>. all artsd. t* 

lit.it II .. BHb niMMt Um. 
oh it. er aw .i'll. IU«vp,. with CuA 
«r lluirlt II', m i.py tin.ii. ,.A 
Wwfc«u:uiWf .r.'ircm'irf.A. 
tajmUn fer u»-in — -*n r i ,f jf*. 

3ENJ. ALLEN & CO. 

137 A 139 State St. Chicago, 
Tajiorwr* A W he 1 realm of 

WATCHES, 

JEWELRY, 

DIAMONDS. 

WATCH VATCfllAU. TOOU, Of- 
TICAL 000DB. »LVM A 
PLATtO WAOL 

Wntrra Af’ti te III* Howard 
Wet thr*. Crwetmlrir* eft- 
lid lad dll An>n **rrywhere. 
>!-atN.n rofatea-Jrwa.at . 

TMC CC4.CB4ATEO 

P. CENTEb’ERI A CO'S 

KID GLOVES, 

C. L.Vbm Dorea 
feOLK AOEKT, 

7 Central Music Hall, 
C H ICAOO. 
LATHE'S. tL-.ue.ftd willre from 
Ck'urafu Mual!% me well eoiisIWd 
** ibouct U *lmt km. KAIL 
ORbP.KS *ii«oal aue». 

dan Seo4 far Lie! cl Krtcn tad 
Calar* MiuUct Fitra Joen. 

OZONE! 

Naturv'e yreat dlimfo taaL, afeaa 
lately dmrvye all foal oitm 
tiattnanor (Mil and duraea-tareed 
ing errau I'tMitir.ly 

oncurosKfl malaria, 

eo cwuitiiua <a norm rltmatee. 
KIUIVES “HAYFEVER” 
preoijitl? end enrety than 
Ihrr known a(*aU. W'rtta 


D., 



M*tioLe»»nfr-r u. 

rOMTABLR * MTATIOSAKY 

S TEAM ENGINE S! 

Aloo BkinOu'c bvprov*a Patent 

Double Circular 



8 AM MlIiLH! 


Writ, for Prfoe Luu and Ctrm- 
tore, M#nti'»a Cm-m* J ure. 

WAVERLY 


for foul (tarrioilan te 

E. C. COOK, M 

HU BTATL . . C 

fadnnad k? > 'a OUn C -Jf. 

ST. JAMES 

MILITARY 

academy 

BEY. MTHELBERT TAltOT. 

Hotter. 

Board 1st ftrlioel far Raya. 

\sr atioa kiwlthfoil. PIm it uu. 
enperLsr. Flu bote for w#*» 

Pufot, C.llrve err Boilnre*. 
Within #aey arm* «f all rr#»L 
•m ultra, '’arrfoll perianal it»- 

E leiwo at all Uo*m Trrtne, 
per eanuiu. N*«d for at*, 
l. 


Wm.L.HILL&CO, 

KALAMAZOO. MlCH. 

Mas ularlurm of 

SAW AND8HINOLB 

JJ1LL JJACHINERY. 

Smd for oar llUntmlnl Or.alar 
devripllee >'tnirftleaiB *Xlf«rr' 
•irnliV. Raw.Mill toint- »*in»t>» 
iaaern. Writa alt* l- r 11lea Ire- 
tlitn* i>f a<tr Pitact Arilaf Drae 
Saw Machine; our New Style 
K«c*atrl«&ew fluid* t A Shu«<U 
Doltinr end Sappiug Mftcklfta. 
Cfe i luf t-drew w»*W. Sim. C- J. 


c, nmr.ni, ROSE POLYTECHNIC 

INSTITUTE 

Terra Mast., lad. 

CHA3. 0. THOMPSON, 


WASHINGTON, O. a 

MISS. LIPSCOMB, 

Purcirn. 

R0ARDI.VQ A DAI flrHOOL 

to* rovsu LsbiFJL 

Tk# too re* ot In rtrariian U 
tki*rou<h and proyrraeFr*. Flret- 
elan Prcf.*tnre and T#arh#r» ift 


A Sekaal cl 1 


Me- 


T HE reason of Us nupeHorlty over Oulnlne ace 
other rerna It—a In thin dinna.e Ujrrn Is al¬ 
ways more or leM •ternngetnent of the Uwr. and 
often of the dtg©«tiv© organa Th© re/ne lies 
tuvtaliy giTrn have referenc© only to jwevenuog 
the paroxysm or breaking th© cnllL without re- 
gara to the condition the system may be l©fl in 
a ter the chills have been removed; whereas the 
mere breaking of the chill te but a email part of 
whst is required toperfreta radical cure. Tit* 
▼snout organs of the body, more especially the 
Liver and tbe htoinach. must be brought into a 
healthy condition, oinm’wie© a return of the 
chills will be the probable remit The true rea- 
oa, therefore, why tbe relapsee of Chills aad 
Fever are so frequent te because they have never 
been more than half cured; that te. the causes 
which first produced tbe dieeaae have never heea 
removed, a proper use of WINTERSlUTH*fl 
TONIC never fsils to cure the midi ohe ’R kftS 
of Fever and Ague. 

|f*Fon Bale nr Au. Dacoemrs.^EJ 


errry d«panm»ttt. 
emr berime baft. enh,«aid radi 
Jan. ©hfe. For tarme addrsea 
Ik# ©riaopal (nae.Cwa 

that ore eound an onpr GuMft 
Ordlaary ettoelnc )••< r* ik# trs- 
dftffrTg.xpwwtl to <ii u sod bnM> 
ce, cauunc uln-e»,d fiwlaeddle. 
•bliuf u. luxe# tor iitrntbe ot 
mi*. Lrotl. i »ol# lrftU>#r pe v 
nnd*# tk* ik'< turn asC 
»n; irke* and 4**a«* led 
*i>m ft eoJ#, »T**i«nr l-'Us*. 
u«ti a irtA*- Cie*v Mr*# umi 
IL All IsdureaU: jf |taiUoal»rt. 

IQCXK HOH PAD CO. 

NOTRE DAME, 

OF MARYLAND 

REAR G0VANST0WN. 

RftlUtunr* Co., kid. 

Tfeb tn»«ltuL«R, tviuitrtnd kf 
.a tM»t*n «if Nous Uium 
.: d**irsMy lor it* A Hi* 

imUikiI * k ^ 

nary drttv tinn I 

Sr»(iAL ATTFST10R 
k ir»»#i* to Ciwnrxwiu n *n,i Ms- 
th#ito»Jies, ttui rrmck si») (let. 

ton Lnn<uar<w. Mu»lc and Pfeyw 
tad Collar*. Mmlk* C-J . 

bJbilliN 11 N (i 8 

PIANOS 

▼wt 

Lsidiag I&stnncnt:. 

WARCRQOMS 

15 E 14th Str N Y City. 

FRANK TEUPE, 

Sun A ff.fit fof Kmtocky, 

MO Fourth Set , teuUvttt*. 


rkmci.CtvU rSKSSSA. 

la, CkauUtry and t'f 
Mauuiaitiifift- Madnii* HfeOfv 
L*fe»ravwi*t, Uhrmry, Cfifoi.M 

ai >l M«ii*U- Cui»I ffwi waft 

fail lufiin&atkrs (orwaidrd os 
■l>yllrstiwi>. ftfretlw* CJ. 


HUAI) SCK iYPKltS 

AND 

PlrOTi\9a 

WHEELBARROWS 

-AML 

TRICKN 

efaJiklndi. 

STEEL SINKS. 

M taufartar«d Vy tk* j 

KILBOURNES JACOBS 

■ tsrrACTt kt.vu re. 
COLUMBUS. OHIO. 

8*cd for c-toln ga*. 

MOST ME UN OFFICE * 

com-jomu. 

<C1uk Room A, 

Or and Farid* Haul. ('hlCS|S. 
(OOAfi t 

Com>i|»«nd«Bi and Mana*n. 
Oi*r *60.000,00© 

•mfe ot mern a*aval ^rurfirrm and 
irvt, m .HiNtad Vyt^iaae* 
Ku.rN.W^m, J.febna a*d 
R«<a. ff. an I Maauft latvivea n«ar 
Cfewan. alwit ukalir mill fer uh 
•* CaA*VwM( Miaou*. Mr. 
Wlira*. rir»l»oar porta* ifer Vwih 
aa itt,arul^iwui)u aqnuaraa*. 


LAN E 6l BOD LEY C0.» 

John A Water SU..CtnclnnntL 

Fortftble and Mai loanry 

Steam Engines, 

Stt jm Boifra A Brno It 11 It. 
With Cana- ity ot 3,000 to VAfif* 
fort oar Aar . K*nit ter »|n»!*I 
rlrrulftr at rw lift. I Ftftata. 
Uftft Horn fll'l, wh -Li w# .all U 


H* i 

M-n'rir, Curuiir i*u. 



Otd»n rt*.-utrd -life afeaalwto 
^roinptii.t* and letafrlljr. Ad- 

Morrla P. Borden. 

(M"ia CkWfiff* Board of Tmdo.) 
121 LA SALLE ST., CHICAGO. 

Indortftl tr N'n <HR*« C .J 


L>L.L VUlii 

SEMINARY, 

BALTIMORE. MO. 

Mits WORTHINGTON. 
PitMim. 

gflL'tant Uft. liar I Prrpa/rt 
for Cadre*. ^uparUtr adraninpi* 
la An, Ui* teftffuaffn. st*d .Mu- 
»U. B*«utlli>l, h-«lthful Inefii 
tiwn. A wi-t k.un Sebtwli 
rnnd toM# , t.r*»'uabl* rh«rt«a. 
Vaar ferjifii S#pi |fl, md* Jan* 
I*. For Ctrouten ftddrrw Ul* 
Miflfal Mauling C~J. 

ALEXANDER 

INSTITUTE. 

While PHuna, W**t cheat re Co* 

n milt from Hen York Cuy, ft* 
Harfom R R- 

A Military H Mirth ng SchctJ 

Ollr.r t. Wlilfo. A. H.. rk. 0. 


POWELL BROS. 

W»flik6MR0. CF-AWf0R0 OL PA, 
Its par in i mod Brecui of 

Clydeedolee, 
FlrUNERON-MOAUANS. 
DIGU5H-0RAFT5. 
TROTTIRO-BRCO ROAOSTtW. 
SHETLANO POHItS, 

HOLSTEiR AHO DEVON OAmL 
Rare Individual ** rll-or. ,*i 
eh«lt» »ir**iilnf. N*w la,i ■•rt*. 
Utw* o»im unity arrtvltiff. I'r. t 
tew T**-m rut. C*tol-v*»ft 
FUFX r. nrrifimdrui* m(I> 
Cltrd. Vrfllim cnt’ft Jnvi 


TJGf# 


meeASAvioN roe ous neu 

A feftfCl*LTV 

Bora alia tkuroftffkly Si tad for 

fol!*fft. l ntuf|r»»rfd la. llltMra, 

T#mi, #400 mr **«r. Wniafar 
Ian. M ml Inn C -J. 



Ull INSTITUTE, 

For OiniSARD YOUNG LA0IE&. 

101- a Aaklatte A»..t hleaff®. 

Mra. ALICE E. BATES. Principal. 

Fall AcftdMBk and Odfoff* 
prrjama-TfT i|„pa-imi nu ill i»- 
untcinn and uveal lacUrma. 
^uparler tnarwltou Ul Muafo. 
Art aad Mwkrn Lufur**- 
Afford* emnr yara. d tHioaUfn 
a, a t: a tali Inff or col'rr* |>r«|«r- 
atory n<»a*d. Iu ffradintra 
Ad m itte* to IV*//**Ary College 
wtifemri ttnatortUa Mn t' J. 

MIDDLETOWN^ 

CAR WORKS. 

HIrhft*! Sell alt. Arthur k.uff | 

PiiyintUet 

MIDDLE rOV/N, PA. 

*». ir»rniira» or 

RAILWAY AND MINE 

CARS 

at all 4**crtptlftfti Sia o> *t*H 

tort pet <i*r. Ff*cUI alimficm 
fflras to Car Fofffinffi, Cai’.iiaffi, 
*wi Cn*ra«p>wdrti(* lavltod. 
Mmtifln Cora**».Jorai«*i. 

RICHMOND j 

SEMINARY, ! 

M*. 9 £. flrur* St.Riehmoad.Va. 
JOHN H.I OW i.LL, rrtoripftL 

Nino m- oik* be^inm fcn 'ai | 
B*j,t. *4. L*nr* and thumuffhly 
ouipatoat corye ot ia»lnMtoru 
Full Ooltefflat* C ,iir»*i, rtwvia ly 
n/ntdei* la Ft cliih. P»*titb.Mi>- i 
(to and natural >rtrn.*». CH- . 
mnu dallfffetfnl and »dmU»fely 
ault*4 f»r puatl* term N<>rtb, 
W*,» and Sirtoh. S«nd for Cato- 
leyu*. Mra’.tog C J _ 

SLAWSONS 

FARE BOXES 

Change Gates. Change 
SltUea. dnverfl Charge 

ww'yhwh ^ppHance 

Fftr (ftlkailiti* four* «n StrrM 
fLulwavt and Omni fen,**. Alt 
ia*k*tlr* and llnlife. Tli*fe—itn 

th* • "fid. mill n**»1 *rrrrtrt»i*. 

Jtoad , mmii. ni:,ff CJ.) for llli»*- 
tiatiiKii and I’rlrn tn J. B. 
8LAWJU3N, Flop.- ProtL. C. 
C. T. H. R Co.. Nft. 14 W. 44ih 

5b S T nt T. 

PREPARATORY SCHOOL FOR 

mmsin 

IrUIrbrn, Fa. 

rjF. (7J.IUCU.Ph.Lh .Priorip't. 

Studrntl prrpirr I for Lofttffh 
Uolr*nlty. Aa*n«liratiiutl. 
tatma ler thom wUk toff to poa- 
am** a l Unkal Courm, or a 
CftnTM to c»*it. VI* fcanuwJ aad 
Minin* K»ffta**rloff ( hmuatiy, 
M*ulliirffi. tit TolUira lata* 
II 01 **rt,i r Item to ail afel* to paa* 
tv* »*train* tsamlnaUen. \VrUa. 
Mnntloa Cwoua.Jw*»»i 


StW-MILL SET WOflKS, 


Addreaa TAYLOR MANFG. CO. 
Chaiutmralmrff, Pa. 
M«ntIoa C -J. . __ 

ST. JOHN’S SCHOOL, 

F*alkland. N*ft Cailto Co , Dvl. 
Rev. Fredeitch Thompaon. N. A . 

Ilf. r a 

R*-"j**m S*pi If. la reautry, 
ft n,ii*r hr rail, frnm Fkiler 
HhIIMU < (final* No matana. 
H*.<«u* raw. Oroond* 
l*« Thrait mbtoat nnwrrw 
ftoiMt roirif.’rta Cbrt»U*r In* 
f.tMMo aad tajoktof Wafohlul 
far. >rrr mannati and tnen.li. 
Prvpoi** for fe,Mia*«B ar cftltoffw. 
|.VVJ p,T Kfeool I*ar Jfdar.rrd, 
fen» cared Ine d«rtaff ia'iiMi*r, 
at hr-~l"-*» »''1I f. Life* 


cisnsvtTi 

CONSERVATORY 

MUSIC. 

MISS CLARA BADE, 

thrreueu. 

Ytxal aud iBitMimar.iaJ So:*. 
1»ta pmpatetl for Cliurrh, Con. 
em a* Oraturto. C'*rtHUm*a 
mntfd an,toll ras>|Mt«at ta 
Mark. A limlt«d auiDt>*r uf 
yomtff ladla* ms braid in iha 
Ccniarvatory. Addrra* Ml* 
Ci.a* litii, 14* ©roadway, 
CVaritiaafi, *» M**>iioft C-J. 

LUMUA aiKULUlU CO. 

CLINTON. MASS. 

Jll» to*kman §t, - N«w Y,»a«. 
14 S*a#» Baitdti.*, N* *Hi«. 

14* Lab* St., - • • Cut, *air, 
,,«r»r ni BiKiiniini 

WIRE CLOTH, 

na .11 rt trwit. 1 

LARGEST STOCK! 
LOWEST PRICES! 

in tNiiKi 

S**4 for lltokitatrd CaUU^u* 
,,'J S-unpIm. M*nitoo 


FKUi 


AMERICAN 
T EVAPORATi 


OR. 





ILLt hTNATMi MARI AL 

i and Hiiwyof Pm Intli tt«;* 
ratine Rnlnait, KKKfl. 

AMBKICAN KVG. CO. 

WAYMEiUORO.PCNN. 

M*OtInn til* rni, ai»a-lncai»>U 

■fHOANNlH MOuir 

ACADEMY 

R*lat*rat*wn, Md. 

HY. ARTHUR.. RICH. A. W.. M. 0. 
Unite. 

Tb* Dforwran Scftftol fof OMa. 
FoarutMl to IWf. U toll*, rruai 
ftallinora, nn Wmtorr, Mi»r\ia«nf 
It R. Notod for femdikiwitift.*. 
tkutnttffb tottrurtian, «i«iu 
tmtntox, and iH* raflnltiff tafln* 
'('*« M? a Chrtuion feno,* Writ* 
to (Milrf w i. Mraitoi C.|, 


mtssitsmci srffiffs mm s cos, 

UNITED STATES 

Eelectm ipse; 

204U CId A St., Chiraxo. 


Huntiogton, W. Va, 

klaafo*. of all ktodj«f 

FREIGHT CARS 


f 1III.LKD FAR WMKKLIs 
CAR CAftTIRKA, 

CAR BRIv^m, 

Lttt OJIOTIVK AXLE*. 
tUDIlKREO Ul AXLAS 
far © hart. Fitted T* Atlre* 
C»rTft*r<n>d«n** lavltod. Me 
rw-Muduca* 


Univiuiil Ul imtUGAl. 

M'ai.nn or 

MEDIGINEfSURGEBY 

Ann Arbor. Mich. 

A. R. PALflER. ■. It.. Draa. 

Op*n» OrL I. Caaro*. tbr*ft 
v»*r» —oln« OMMtk* «a,k. Fa 
iron* .Mtntaaikra rw(alrrd, 
W'ou»*ii mi , 1 1 Mrd F*»* Ta 

tior,.r*«id*nU ui Mtokiyav. fl* 43 
tlril i-rar, |15 *»rb »ufeirtiu*r‘ 
vear. UradualloB, III 1 . N*r 
fo- Ctoralan with foil 
Al.ftlimi eg 


any oc.* raa rurr felm —H «jmI«LIt and p*lolr«*1». 
al.ta .ad * ndftra*ai«fit«fmin *r*,ir»»«» ui* ti*»i m«uAr.r*<ldr«M 

U. U. AAAI, LA. A.D., l««F«Itoa IK.. Aon iorkUiy. 

tear rx tiwm ijr 


AUGUSTA 

FKiissassa:, 

bTAVtoTON, VIRQIBIA. 

MiSS.MARY I.6AL0WIN. 

A*tK*/«/. 

fonlw ftpufi* NrpL A. Mo*» 

Uwr.xiffMly »i»Mlpfa.i Srfeaol to 
tb* J»uatfe. sumui A***»T- 
*,i«a to n*»y «f*|iartnr*i»L 
Trrm* r*«M>ftafete. F« foil par 
timlan appir to Priaili*al, a* 
•tov«, l-M CmtoUfoe. Mra Uftft 
te-oiiadwai*, . _ 

F0H r EOWARO 

Collegia Institute, 

FORT EOWARO. M. Y. 
J0RKPM E. NIAU. D.l»..Prra. 

Nrw ferVk fealldinffi wftttwrd 
br *,«am. Haed*fta,r«1, Iwil ap¬ 
pointed Itaoelt' ff 5*inliia'V for 
LADIES AXD GA.XTI.EaCS 
ia N. Y ^tata, Tlai»t**M i**» h 
eru Tkift* T*ftr»' Grikduatln* 
O-tirv*: i'm m*ltn»M aad C«,r 
leff* Prrp«r»t>ry C*«ir»ra. folk 
^*ar,^*pL 10. AdtlfVM tka 

“HOLLINS - 

INSTITUTE. 

BOTETOURT SPRINGS, VA. 

A School ftf tk* toM ty pa for 
rtrl*. Twrutv «nd 

Irachm. Utarstura. ClftMtca 
ard Art taoffki and** lk« boat 
•inn,l-r.lt. A mild nmunUlB 
rllmata; mlarrai waun; t>u tur- 
mum. tcva«ry- il't to-»ioa 
ep*t»R«|*L I*- *fo»*4 fo» Clertto 
4___ 

MT. PLEASANT 

rnimmm 

SINQ SISG, .V. Y. 

J. HOWE ALLEN 

PRINCIPAL 

A Aftardto* StL «l at W vran* 
ttond l r g . and ftf nafon j! rrputa. 
twn. foctlfly kftfttthtal and 
fe*«dlUaJ. )ut*ii)ff«*.t and toot, 
•ufih buteartteft A (cmvleta 


MiCHlUAN 

KUTARUCADENT 

Orchard Lak*. MirMraa. 

COL. J.b.ROGEKS, 

SopeetOleodeoA. 
a at•_tot feOeoct. r or eove 
Prt pa/ca fotr Oilrff* o* Bnol- 
a*«a. Atnctal aUftftOaa paid to 
tfe* Ktifflufe bran«■!»*•- timda- 
at*a .dmiltod to CaWvraily upaa 
dipDni,*. LcnaUfta owtnr p ft r rftd 
to to titty and kcalihtotarti- 
C*p«»**a aolt |AI0 per year. 
S««>d for OnnLari 

CROTON 

Isstitnte. 

Crotca-na Hadr#a. S.T. 

FRANK S. ROBERTS, 

Pnoftyol 

Oar ekjett to to **nd eut y»i«| 
an.a not caly with catrfol traia- 
ii ff to nrUia atadwa. out al«a 
• ilk caltwrrd aad wai l BMpL 
pi,n.it Rtlod*, oerrrvt baklU aad 
pood tr.MM,*r». C rroiin oaat «a 
r*-,u—v MrotKw*C-J. 


Kilitwy 


LLASS/CAL ai HOME 

INSTITUTE, 

Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 

MISS SARAH Y. H BUTLER. 
PRINCIPAL. 

YOUNG LADIES 

Kind fe*r* *K<*ll*at adrftntaffaa 
far a ii,trit«ffh rdwtatloo Spa- 
rtal tow km la Fr»urh, ticrataa, 
tinenuoa and M«ik. H on- 
• •uiforu ami tiniurpaoftd car. 
are mtrfeftd foalam, Saad far 
Cleettorr. <*-J . 

PITTSBURC 

rrms collece 

AUil MSEItalOIT o! Music. 

tH* dlttlact SrkoK*. riirufe 

»« Ran ad von tu£*t to all tit# 
Untn.ii« nt a tfesrooefe. t«lai, 
«r ■ n.aa>»etaJ rdiwaUfta. 3SM 
pupUt Nimfetr <f boardert ltm> 
Itod. KM) foil mmte Imacn* 
foe fit. Sfltk yeoi npratStpl A, 
*RA. Rafora tuainaff raffaffrrarat 
.lMtwkrrc, wad for a.w <aut- 
iMffft. U* Dr I.C PF.IL5HINO, 
bn .PuiA,itf,Pa Met.’* C-d, 

NASHVILLE 

COLLEGE 
I FOR YOUNG LADIES; 

Nashville, Tenn. 

! Bee GEO W F. PRICE. 0 D.Pre a. 
j Fnr hit Her «dnratu» nf .. 
I m»u. C«rnlattd w-lk Vaadrr- 
tUt t’ntvwaiv. wtik r^arll*©** 
of L*ctur«t, I. Utartot, Mutrsitt*. 
Apparai j Ruiidin* »-*w. Fa*- 
tiitu/r, *:*ffaat AU B'ftdarn Im* 
prft*ro,*ritj, *l*ctrtc toll*, ta!a- 
p.i .-trr. pauftfiff*, *I*ratof. Ft oft 
adraataffw la Matk and Art, 
I F total toft > irtftta* fftlwftte _ 


SCHOOL, 

RXlllGll, M. C. 

REV. BENNETT SUEDES, A. M. 

Principal. 

Tb. Adr.nl T*tm fifth* 45tk 

^ .,,1 Aisaaal toi.u*. to* n* 

mnday, Fepi U, IMA. T’a- 

anul adroitaffy* offrird Fontk- 
*ru Stud.oU. Fw (NtnJ&enn, 
aitdr. 1 * ( mnattoataff C*4,) tb* 
ItoKf, Tin. ftoaafttl Sanh*, 


CURTIS SCHOOL 

FOR BOYS. 

Brookfield Center, Conn. 

FREDERIC A s. CURTIS, Ph. B. 
Ptutnru. 

A FAMILY SCHOOL 

Fur a dorm ynasc boy*. A 
plat-* wbrre a bay U toftknt aftor, 
la rcnn.iL *«P ovt, aad laarat 
ftttot wwrlhv thtoffi than kooft* 
alaa*. Tfenroiiffb la*tnirtioM ia 
lb* to»i. S*ait for Cl/cniar may 
Utfi*. Mwitloa I'd. 


So r«aatw-no« with aur «Ll>*f 
Drte-tltr. Ac*ncy. RrUaW. Dw 
toctiift Sftravn ftaittid I* -mr 
pftrtftf tk* roantrv. Itoattct.. * 
pan, C*rr»«piftdft*WV '.rtlir L 
Hir^Mt Nfoiartt R»f*rtoN’e 
jjth.rt J 1t*nt>rrt« J. 

NORTHERN OFFICE 

COGSISS-JOUBSAL, 

Tu b Room t, 

ft road Paetfl* Haiti. Chlruyft 

EDGAR L. WASEMAN. 

C«m»r»<*t>d*at aad Manafftr. 

Orrr fliO.OOO.OIMt 
wwife ef tree aa.a.1 t»a«lfe«rft IM 
ft* ,-ii-rr, t',d. i. «a«ay*'t fey Chtaaft 
fttiiftTn, Wto'^alr**. J.tife.n mm* 
lUtaiim a»M M»a«f (la-ace. *»u 
l 1 ‘aift.tftfeftt t matwby i*m 

d Cvf.ua <t»«a rtlawaa. M»* 
Vik.su ri*'i«aay pan*f tfe. Ran! 
aa iwtirrttot a nrtfeag»pd«toa« 


MEDICAL. 


DR. LANCASTER’S 

DISPENSARY. 

313 Fourth Street, brtvren Market and 
JefTerflon Street*, neur Market St.. 
LOL’ISVILLE, KY. 

De. Lamcastm. a reeulAf rreduat* In all the bramhei 
«f Medicine. Sutffery, Dtieaae. «/ WotOCn, and Venrraal 
r> •-*.«. w,th tw.itty run pmiia, contintii-t to treat -ll 
r*IVAIR. CHMONK. and Srxual lMt'.nn aa a tpecUlty. 

SYPHILIS _ the direat altlUtirn of mankind, and 
tinleas thctv»«ffh!>’ Jtcl. cntaila untold evil* on m«n, 
woman, ami the n'Tii; m,g yet ufibcmt, t* armted in its bale¬ 
ful eatention, poaiuiely cured, fend the pobon tniuelj eradi¬ 
cated frnm :S* ayatem. 

>it*Hr. a. ainel In from two tv five dire, 

<*t BUT AND STIiaVKl, bowavsr ohalMfete fe«d COinpIL 
cat*kivnnanentty itited. 

CHRONIC C4TAKRH and SAtt* THROAT, ctualnff le« 
*i amoll and br «»i,. and oliti unplrai.nt fejrnip- 

t-<m*. t-M --..iMlc treated lip a treatment tudd fend pteaiant. 
vet to ef.V^uve t ei it i--ir* th* u. »»* uitt, iltuuffh iha 
L-tae* ef tk* turtT liaie become alfcrted. 

Skin Dr p trrute.i -*uit ermrvent lucreta. 

I'll ra. MftTt’LA FlKWRR. ftnn all otUei tineaiet ot the 
R©ctunt. cured • almut tht uce of the fenlto or cau»ttc. 

hr*H MATkJRRKEA AND lMP^riRNCV. the rtaolt aT aelf. 
aLute and oettial txtra%€\, <att«triff Set* i --.ir.ru. Seminal 
I mr*tlent. Debthry. Diznnrva, Ditrineta nt .Iffbt, livdtfeft* 
tnu. Defoe live Metnnry. ltoipond-nrf. A*-eraion to ficcTetr 
anti l«rta of Seeua) Puwrr. render,nr ftlurrlape improtrer and 
untiappy-. po«ttlv*|y cur.-,I in half tTie time uiuallv required 
T.te treatmer.t does not mterteie »,tl, i<uaineM. nor eapo«e 
the pfettvnu Charffea refevir.atde and Ct:«lu» Gt'AMAHTBae. 
ConvultAttna fend corrrapnnffonce confidential. 

< t-' -« I Inure.— 1 > A bl to I F. kf.t rtom a.jo to fi and from 
7 ta * T M. Sunday! 9 to to.yo A M. 

Addrea*. DR. LANCA&TBR. aa abova 


JO rnD MCU Cored in ’» dMjr*. Dnig fttere, 15 
43 lUn mL.I1 N. Elf-'euth, Philo.; Fourth»v©. 


and (Ireeu at . Louteville. 


jo25 Fr MoJtW#78 


I'ltOFESSIONAto 

JDTt. SWIFT, 

Veterinary Surgeon, 

\\riLl. practice ib thia city and vUrtt place* 
>v corttreniml to rail witltiu a rtuliua of UK) 
tiiilra. All d *• , aon* kopwn toatfed 

rvcognteed bjr tee praf#«*lon dm If ill r perforraad. 
lAunc-uns* arttuig from cuixmio navfcui.tr Joint 
diftcaae. ringuoao and many other cane©*, and 
waich 1 ia« pentteteBiiy reaiated uli oUutr effort© 
at relief, cured bv a intxftflrJ ftttrgtbol operaii.in. 

Student* received au<1 inatriuried In Uitn ap»*c* 
luliy at v*cii u« is oiHtreUou* on tit© eye. with 
models, diagrams and th© aubjeot iueif. 

Headquarter. -» nt V. 8. Carrington • Livery 
8 table. No. 132 West Main sL Mr. Carrington te 
©uuofiuted with Talephone txchange.